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~ ~ Page

88--.--The-Daily Sentinel

Thursday, May 12, 2005

www.myaailysentinel.com
'

.

Padres beat'Reds, Bochy wins No. 800

MLB Standings
National L~~gue
EootOivlolon

W

tive ~ plus

innings this time, and
ASSOCIATED PRESS
ultimately got beat by ;m old
nemesis. Klesko's three~run
homer put the Padres up 4~2
CINCINNATI
Tim and left him 8~for~l6 in his
Stauffer got a win in his major career against Wi lson with six
league debut and helped B-ruce homers.
'T m trying to muke great
Bochy get No. 800.
Stauffer repeatedly pitched pitches in situations where I
out of jams of his owh making. don't have to," Wilso·n lament~
and Ryan Klesko hit a three ~ ed . .
run homer tii send the San
Wilson matched .his career
Diego Padres to a 7-2 victory high by givi ng up 12 hits over., over the Cincinnati Reds on all , a titting ending to a 2~ 7
Wednesday.
homestand that was horrific
San Diego's eighth victory and historic.
in 10 games handed Bochy his
It sta rted with St. Loui s
SOOth win as a manager. Only pulli ng off the greatest ninthBobby Cox, Joe Torre and mning comeback in its history,
Tony La Russa have more seven runs for a I0~9 win.
wins with their current clubs. Closer Danny · Graves got
"To be honest, l have n't booed or~t the tield after the
even thought about it,'' Bochy .Reds' biggest ninth-inning colsaid. "I was pulling for Stauff lalf·e since 1952.
so muc h."
hat year be.t:ame a refer~
Stauffer ( 1-0), the fourth ence point again in Wil son's
overall pick in the 2003 draft, last start. whe n the Reds gave
calmed himself with deep up 10 first-inning mns forthe
breath~ and made good pnches first time si nce 1952.
·
when lt' mattered. The f!ghtFinally, Graves blew another
hamjer gave up two runs, fO\Ir big ninth-i nning lead on
h1!S_ and three walks m s1xo Monday, allowing .the Padres
mmngs, turnmg a 5-2 _lead to rally from a 5- 1 deticit to ·a
over to the ~mllpen.
. 6~5 , 13 ~ in n ing victory that
The turnmg pomt came m dropped the Reds irllo las t
.
·
the first. inning. when Felipe place.
Lopez hn a two-run homer and . "It 's like I've been saying all
the Reds loaded t\le bases w1th alqng: We get good hitting and
no outs. Stauffer got a double no · pitching, or good pitching
play for h1s first great escape, and no hitung," intie lder Ryan
then settled down wh1le fanu ly Freel said . "Today we fi nally
and fnends che_ered from the clicked. We didn't have anyfirst row behind the dugout.
thing."
"It really wasn 't . nerves,"
The final ga me will be
Stauffer said. ''I'm sure for the remembered more. for what it
people in the stands; it was a meant to the P;tdres - an
little bit different and harder eagerly _awaited debut.
~
for them. I was grateful to get
Stauffer, a 2 1~year~old w1th
out of ihat with just two runs." boyish looks. is repeatedly
Dave Roberts had four htts pitched in and out of trouble.
and Mark Loretta got five at He throws four pitches- fastthe top of San Diego's order, ball. change up. curve and
leaqing a 16-hit outburst. sinker- and is known fo r his
Klesko's sixth homer in his composure.
last nine games put San Diego
It was tested right away.
ahead to -stay in the fou'rth-.
Stauffer hit the tirst batter he
· The Reds have lost II of 13, faced - Freel - on a 1-2
taking a nosedive into last. -pitch. then gave up Lopez 's
place in the NL Central.
fourth homer. The Reds then
Starter Paul Wilson (1-4) loaded the bases with no outs
failed to retire any of the eight - Stauffe r also hit Adam
batters he faced in his last out- Dunn on a 1-2 pitch - -and
ing - a 10-run first inning by Darrell 'May began warming
the Dodgers on Friday. The up in the bullpen.
· right-hander struggled through
That's when Stauffer got a
BY JoE KAY

New pastor installed at
Rutland church, A2

LPctGB

Atlanta
21
13
Florida
19
12
Waohlng1oo
18
16
flewYofl&lt;
16
17
Philadelphia
15
20
Cllllral Olvlolon

W
21
17
15
15

St. Louis

MUwaukee
Chicago
Pittsbur9h
Cincinnati
Houston

12

12

.618 .613 ~
.S29 3
.514 3~
.429 6~

LPeJGB
12 .636 16 .515 4
18 .455 6
16 .-155 6

at

"21 .. 364 9
21 .364 9

Wilt Dlvl•lon

W
20

Los Angeles
Arizona
San Diego
San Francisco
Colorado

20

19
16
9

L Pel OB·
13 .606 - .,
15 .571 1
16 .543 2

17 .485 4
22 .290 10

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

WedMIMy '• G.rtMII
San Diego 7, Cincinnati 2
Miiwaul&lt;ee 5, Philadelphia 7!
Chicago Cubs 4, N.Y. Mels . 3, 10
innings -.Colorado 6, Atlanta 5
Pittsburgh 7, San Francisco 2
Arizona 3, Washington 2
Florida 2. Houston 1
51. LOuiS 9, LA. Dodgers 3 .
.

Thursday'• Games

SPORTS

.

LA. Dodgers (Lowe 2-3) a1 51..Louts
(Cerpenter 4-2). 1:10 p.m.
Clnclnflall
(Ra.OrUz 0·1)
at
Philadelphia (Lieber 5-1). 7;05 p.m.
San Francisco (Hennessey 1-0) at
Houston (Pettltle 2·3), B;05 p.m.
ArizOna , (Au.Ortiz 2·2) at Colorado
(Chacon 1-2), 6;35 p m.
..
.. F~doy'o Oomoo
.
Chicago Cubs at Washlng1on, 7:05
p.m.
.
,
Milwaukee at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m.
Clncinneti at Philadelphia, 7:05 'p.m. ·
St. Louis at N.Y. Mats, 7:10p.m.
San Francisco at Houston, 8:05p.m.
Arizona at Colorado, 8:35p.m.
Florida at San Diego, 10:05 p.m.
Atlanta at L.A. Dodgers, 10:40 p.m. . ·

W

into a third-to-home double
play, and Austin Keams lined
out.
.
"We were ki nd of hoping
with ' the way things were
go in~. be' d just get out of the
fi·rst. · .Klesko said. "Your tirst
a t~bat or your .'first inning to
pitch. it 's like you' ve got an
out~o f~ body
ex perience.
Between the nerves and the
excitement, you don't even
know what the heck you're
doing ouf there. But he settled
down. The idea was to try to ge t
him a lead, and he ran with it."

11

GB ,

Baltimore
Boston
Toronto
NewYork
Tampa Bay

22 ·

.667 -

W·

L P01 GB

Chicago

25

9

MIMesota

20

21

13 .616 1 ~

19

16 .543 4

did it once. San Diego stranded 15 runners overall, l 0 in
scoring position. ... Stauffer ·
beat out an infield single in his
tirst major league at-bat. ...
Bochy is the 65th manager to
get 800 wins. ... Ken Griffey
Jr. of the Reds had a double
and a single, He has hit safely
in 14 of hi s last 15 games ....
Wilson is 1-7 io eight career
starts against the Padres with
an 8.84 ERA .... Reds C Jason
LaRue was hitless in three atNotes: The Padres left the bats, extended the•streak to 0~
bases loaded twice. The Reds for-22.

The Reds loaded the bases
again in the third with one out,
helped by two walks, but
Randa popped out and Kearns
swung through a 93 mph fastball. Stauffer's coaches and
teammates applauded and patted him when he got to the
bench.
"He did -a great job keeping
his composure." Bochy said.
"That showed· how mentally
tough the kid is. He could have
caved in there."

Detroll
Cle118land
Kans8s Ci1y

W

L

19
18

14
13

Delee. Chicago . .383: ((abrera.

Florida .. 372;
BCiark, Milwaukee, .341 ; Lo Duca, Florida, .340; Pujols. St. Louis . .338; Overbay.

Pc1 ClB
15 .559 17 .514 1h

20 .412 5
21 .. 382 8

Wectnelday'a Games

RBJ-Oelee, Chicago, 33: Pujols. St. Louis, 29; CaLEie. Milwaukee. 28: JKent, Los
Angeles. 28: Glaus. Arizona. 27;.Feliz. San Francisco, 26: Burrell, Philadelphia. 26.
HITS-Barmes, Colorado, 49; lzturls, Los Angeles, 47: BCiark. Milwaukee. 47:

Delee, Chicago, 46; Pujols, St. Louis, 45; Beltran, New York , 43; Loretta, San Diego,
43.
DOUBLEt-MGiles, Adanta, 14 ; Wilkerson , Washington. 13; Glaus, Arizona . 12;

Helton, Coforado, 12: Delee, Chicago, 12; CDelgado, Florida, 12: CJones, Atlanta, 12;
Griffey Jr.. Cincinnati, 12; Biggio, Houston, 12. ·
TRIPLEs-Holliday; Colorado. 4: Lamb, Houston. 4i Pierre, Florida, 3.
HOME RUNs-G iaus, Arizona, 10; DeLee , Chicago, 10: Pujols. St. Louis. 9: Klesko.
san Diego, 9; ASanders. St. Lou is, 9; Dunn, Cincinnati , 8;' CPatterson. Chicago, 8;
JGuillen, Washington, S: Flo'jd. New York, 8: JKent. Los Angeles, 6.
STOLEN BASE5-Taveras, Houston..10; BAbreu, Philadelphia. 10: Furcal, Atl anta,
9;. Vizquel, San Francisco. 9: Counsell, Arizona, 8; Reyes, New York, 7; Freel, '
·Cincinnati. 7: Rollins. Philadelphia. 7: Delee, Cl:licago. 7.
.
PITCHING (4 Declelons)-Willls, Florida; 7-o, 1.000, 1.08: Webb. Arizona. 4.0.
1.000, 3.30; CHammoM, San Diego, 4·0. 1.000, 1.89; Marquis, St. Louis , 5·1, .833,
3.26; Mulder, St. Louis, 5·1, .833, 2.70; Lieber, Philadelphia , 5·1, .833, 2.57: Eaton,
San Diego, 4-1 , .800, 3.79; Turnbow, Mltwaukee, 4· 1, 800, 2.08: Hampton, Allanta. 41, .800, 2.05; 'PMartlnez. New York, 4·1..800, 3.06.
.
STRIKEOUTS-PMartinez. New Yo~ . 63: SMyers, Philadelphia, 54; Peavy, San
Diego, 53; Burnett, Florida, 52; JVazquez, Arizona, 51 ; Clemens. Houston. 50: Prior.
ChiCago, 46.
SAVE&amp;-Lyon, Ar izona. 13; Mesa. Pittsburgh, 12; Brazoban, Los Angeles, 10; Kolb,
Adanta, 9; Ha:ftman, San D~. 9: Looper, New York , 8; Graves. Cincinnati. 8;
BWagner, Philadelphia. 8.

BAmN~amon .

'

ThUradl)''l Ollmll

Tampa Bay (Kaimlr D-4) at Kansas
Clly (Lima 0·3), 8:05 p.m.
Bal11more (Chen 4·1) al ChiCago
Whl!o Sox (Garland 6-Q), 8:05p.m.

'

eammore, 5-1 , .833, .. ,93.
STAIKEOUTS-Santana. Minnesota. 87: AJol'1nson, New 'f'ofk, 50: Sonderman,
Detroit. 41 ; Bedard, Bahimc:Jre, 41 ; Halladay. Toronto. 41 . Harden. Oakland. 38:

Buyers will be offered top dollar for trade-ins and
no reasonable offer will be refused.
- These units must be disposed of by.the
close of business on Tuesday, May 31st, 2005.

Clement. Boston. 38.

The location of this sale will only be at:
TURNPIKE OF GALLIPOLIS
195 Upper ~iver Road Gallipolis; Ohio.
Factory Certified Representatives will
be 'on hand to assist customers.

,

TeQs, 11 ; Nathan, Mihnesota, 10; FRodnguez. Los Angeles, 9;
SAyan, Baltimore, 9; GuardadO, ~atut . 9; Wickman , C~land. 9: Takatsu, Ch1C8g0,
SAVE ~ro.

8; Foulke, Boston, 8: MBatista, ToroniO, 8

Call 1-800-272-51.79

_Reds put Aurilia on DL
CINCINNATI (AP) - The
R.eds put shortstop Rich
Aurilia on the 15-day disabled
list Wednesday with a strained
hamstring, replacing him on
·
the roster with a pitcber.
·The Reds called up righthanded
starter Elizardo
Ramirez
from Triple-A
'Louisville, protecting themselves in case left-hancler
Brandon Claussen has to miss
his next start. Claussen twisted
an ankle in the fourth inning of
Reds' 5- I victory over San
l)ii:go_ on Tuesday ni~ht.
Aunha wa~ hmmg .198
'

when he strained his left hamstring while running ou! a
ground ball .on .Tuesday night,
forcing him from the gi\ffie.
Aurilia is in a 4-for-32 slunip.
His injury opens the way for
Felipj! Lopez to take over at
shortstop.
Ramirez was 2~ I with a 3.32
ERA in - six starts ·for
Louisville. He made his major
league debut last year with
Philadelphia. The Reds got
him as part of a trade that sent
Cory Lidle to the Phillies last
season.

..

INDEX

~

..

for an appointment or stop in . at

.TURNPIKE OF GALLIPOLIS
195 Upper River Road Gallipolis, OH
.· before May 31st, 2005 !

LINCO~ LN .

~

•

MERCURY

----.

REEO . , ·

during Pomeroy
traffic stop

•

Santana, Minnesota. 5-1, .833, 3.21; ()Hernandez. ChtCago, 5-1 . .833, 2 9 1; Ponsoo.

J.

Local woman inducted into Senior Citizens Hall of Fame Drugs seized

Boston. ·.383: CGuillen , Detroit, .379: BRoberts; Baltimore. 370;

Lugo, Tampa BaY. 9. ·
.
·
PITCHING (4 Doclolonoi-&lt;Jarland,. Chicago, 6-0, 1.000. 2.42 . AfTOI'O, Boston , ~-o .
1.000. 2.91 , 'clement. Boston. 4-0, 1.000, 3.06; Buehrle, Chicago, 5- 1, .833, 3.78:

to

INSIDE

During this disposal, several lending institutions will
be represented and all credit applications
will be accepted regardless of past ~redit history.

Hillenbrand. Toronto.. 370; Tejada, ·Baltimore, .348; Varitek. a«&gt;ston .. 343; ISuzukl,
Seattle, .340.
RUN&amp;-aAoberts. Baltimore. 29; Hillenbrand. Toronto.· 28: ARodriguez, New York.
28: ASOriano, Texas. 27: Teixeira, Texas, 26; Hinske. Toronto. 26; Cellucci. Texas.·26;
Damon, Boston, 26; Jeter, New York, 26.
RIM-Tejada, Baltimore. 36; ARodrigue.z, New York, 32: BRoberts, Baltimore, 30;
56xson, 5eatt1e, 29; MiSweetley, Kan~ City, 29: MRamirez. Boston, 29; GAnderson,
Los Angeles, 27; Sheffield. New York, 27.
HI1'S--Oamon , Boston. 54: Hillenbrand. Toronto, 51 : BAoberts. Baltimore. 50;
ISuzukl. Seattle. 48; Tejada. Battimore. 47; Sheffield. New York. 45: CGuillen, Detroit.
-44; MISweeney, Kansas City, 44.
DOU8LES-00rtiz, Boston, 13: ASonano, Texas, 12; BellhOfn, Boston, 11 ,
MiSweeney, Kansas City, 11 ; Damon. Boston. 11 : S~ffield , New York, 1t · THatner,
Clewland, 10; Bla)od(, Texas . .10; Tejada, Baltimore. 10; JvLopez, Baltimore, 10.
TFIIPL£8--R ios, TorQnto, 4: lnge, Detroit. 4; CGuillen.. Detroit. 4; DeJesus. Kansas
City. 3; BAC&gt;bens. Baltiffiofe. 3; !Suzuki. Seat1le. 3.
.
HOME RUN&amp;-AAodfiguez, New York, 11, BRobertl . BattJmore, 10: ASorlano,
Texas, 10; Tejada, Baltimore, 10; Sexsoo, Seattle. 9: D0r11z, Boston, 9: Konerko,
Chicago, 9; MiSweeney, Kansas.,City, 9: Tt.t!art1nez. New York , 9.
STOL£N BASES Podsedni(c. Chicago. 17; FIOQ!nl, Lol Angeles, 12; 8Aoberts,
Baltimore, 12; Crawford, Tampa Bay, 11: THunter. Minnesota. 11 . ISuzukl, Seattle. 10:

and other local government programs
and merging others into a i1ew pro~
gram - with about $ 1.5 billion less
- at the Commerce Department.
Rep ublicans in Congress halted
the change__s by restoring block .grant
money 111 th e budget that both houses passed on April 28. The budget
they passed calls fo r Congress to
· prov ide the same amount of money
as this yea r. or about $4.7 1 billion,
the Cleveland Pl ain Dealer 'reported
this week.

OBITUARIES

Toronto 12, Kansas City 9
Boston e, Oakland 5N.Y. Yankees 13, Seattle 9
Detroit 6, Texas ·5
Chlca9o'WMe Sox 5, Tampa Bay 2
Baltimore 7, Minnesota 4
Cleveland 9, L.A. Angela 3

_Due to the recent Decreased Stock ·Rating,
Ford Motor Company has·authorized the
immediate disposal of 200 excess vehicles in this area.
Ford Motor Company has authorized
TURNPIKE OF GA-LLIPOLIS
to dispose of the new Ford, Lincoln &amp; Mercury
•
cars and trucks,
at
or
below
cost.
·
.
.

RUNs-BCiark, Milwaukee, 29; JKent, LOs Angeles. 28: Barmes, Colorado. 27;
Delee, Chlcago,' 26; lzturls, Los Angeles, 25; LGonzalez. Arizona, 25; Bradley, Los
.Angeles, 24.
·
,

AMERICAN LEAG\IE

.

~

Milwaukee, .337; CJones, Atlanta, .337.

stru du re projeqs. fi re equ ipment.
and water and sewer extension projects. Other CDBG programs tund
water and sewe r, downtown re1·.i t a l ~
ization , hOL1sing and other programs
~.
at the loca l leve l.
Projects wi ll he evaluated based on
app lications submitted by towns hips
ami villages. and grant awards
announced th is summer.
In order to finance the war in Iraq
and permanent tax relief packages.
Bush proposed elim inating CDBG

River since it fe ll in 1967, las t minute or plan s changed
including IO ~ye arco l d Sara that December day to keep
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
Van Cooney of Long' Bottom. people that might've otherThe disaster happened 28 _ wise been on the bridge
POMEROY
Meigs
yea
rs before Sara was born away from it.
Count y Comm hsioners will
begin an· informati on c am~ but she was moved by the
" Everyone
remembers
story
of
fell
ow
I
O
~
year~
o
ld
where they were · at,"
_paign about 911 service next
week. and wi ll consider two · Kathy Byus whose body was VanCooney 's mother Diana
fundin g optio ns. for a local- never recovered from the said, a fac t she learned after
9 11 serv ice thi s summer Ohio River when lhe Si lver becoming what she &lt;:ailed .
the "amateur camera person''
based on needs and public Bridge collapsed.
Page AS
"I read where her teacher for the project.
·
sentiment.
• Beverly Chapman, 66
An important part of the
The means of funding 9 11 _had to move the girl's desk
of
the
classroo
m
because.
out
• Jon Freeman, 49
"Resource
Project'&lt; was
chosen by comm iss ioners ·
she'd
start
cryin
g
when
writing a paper about the
will then go before the voters
• Amanda Hoffman, 43
she 'd.look at it," VanCooney student's subj ect matter and
in
November.
An
informa~
• Harry Richard, 86 ,_
on the subject of the Si lver
tiona! advertisement outlin- said.
VanCooney
created
a
class
Bridge disas ter VanCooney
ing the benefits of a 9 11 s~r~
vice wi ll be printed in The project su rrou nding the dis ~ deci'ded to end her paper
Daily Sentinel on May I 6 aster for her " Resource with the ·sentence, "A chain
at
Southern is only as stron~ as its weakand 18. An official public Project"
Elementary.
Her
project est link." in reference to the
comment period will begin
included
researching
news- one rusted eye-bar th at ulti'
• Harrisonville alumni
later,
Meigs
County
Comn1issioner
Mick paper articles, a reconstruc ~ mately caused the entire
reunion planned.
tio1i of the bridge with .pipe bridge to collapse.
'
Davenport said Wednesday.
See Page A2
a
video
in
cleaners.
and
VanCooney was j ust one
The adverti sing campaign
• Nurse presents program is a cooperative effort of the which she interviewed peo~ link in the chain of fourth
Southern
commissioners and their 911 pie about their own experi- graders from
to retired teachers.
ences
with
the
disaster.
Elementary
who
created
Beth S..&amp;ent/ pl1oto
co mm i tte~. Davenpor-t said,
See Page A3
"
Resource
Projects"
to
help
Fourth
graders
at
Southern
Elementary
recently
researched
"
I
interviewed
a
news
and is not designed to influ ~
them
learn
research
ski
lls
on
and
created
"Resource
Projects
"
on
subjects
that
ranged.
from
• Meigs County Court _
ence the public in favor of reporter from Point Pleasant
one fundin g mechani sm ·· named Maxine Walters who topks that ranged from rain rain forests to ra ilroads. 10-year-old Sara VanCooney chose
News. See Page AS
said she saw debris going fores ts to rai lroads. A li st of the ·1967 collapse of the Si lver Bridge as her subject proving
over another.
The public will vote in down the river .for two days " Resource Project" award that the disaster affects and fascinates a_new generation.
November on whether the aftt;r the bridge fell, " Winners will appear in a later ·. VanCoo_ney posed with her collection of newspaper articles
county should proceed with a VanCooney said about not ed ition of The Daily about the disaster and her replica of the Silver Bridge made
WEAmER
from pipe cleaners.
•
911 plan based on funding only pieces of steel but · Sentinel.
from a $500,000 annual ,
half-percent
sales
tax
increase, or a 50~cenr permonth telephone oharge.
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
generate HOEFLICH@,MYOAILY SENTINEL.COM
which · would
approximately $65 ,000 per
year. The comm iss ioners·
POMEROY - "l was so
911 committee has come out thrilled to be to be chosen and
BY · BETH SERGENT
in strong support of the sales so proud to represent Meigs
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
tax increase, · but also has County," said Mary Lou ·
proposed construction of a Hawkins about her induction
POMEROY
new
building, and suggests into the Ohio Senior.Citize ns
De~llo on Paee AS
"
Individuals
found to be in
operating the service fro m a Hall of Fame.'
,
possession
o f dangerous
separate, autonomous agency
The ceremony attended by
drugs in the village of
with a $45,000 per~year many dignitaries including
Pomeroy will be . prosecuted
director in charge.
Governor Robert Taft took
!O
the fullest extent of the
Commissioners,
mean- place
Tuesday at
the
· law," Pomeroy Police Chief
while, have reported signifi- Statehouse
Atrium
in
2 SECilONS- t6 PAGES
Mark . E. Proffitt said in
cant public opposition to a Columbus.
Hawkins,
a
Calendars
regards to his department's
A3 sales tax increase, and say Middleport resident, was one
latest arres t that allegedly
Classifieds
B4-6 cost estimates associated of 13 Ohio senior citizens
involved illegal drugs.
.with building a new 911 cen- selected for the honor.
Charlene Hoenlohf photo
Comics
B7 ter are inaccurate because
Proffitt reported that at
She was the only'one from Mary Lou Hawkins of Middleport who was inducted into the
I :06 · a.m. on May 7 at the
'
Dear Abby
A3 they do not inClude the cost Southeastern Ohio in the Senior Citizens Hall of Fame Tuesday in Columbus displays cer~ inters'e ction . {)f Butternut
of land acquisition and -infra~ 2005 group of inductees~ and
Edito.rials
Avenue and Lincoln Hill,
A4 structure improvements.
the _second of JOO individuals tificates and pictures presented to her during the ceremony.
Pomeroy Ofjicer Christopher
this point, we foresee_ s1·nce the Hall of Fame was f
·
·
Faith•Values
A6-7 · . "At
1
91 1
t
o Area Agenc1es on Agmg pride that Ohio's seniors Gruber pulled over a vehicl~ · ·
0
Imp el!'e.ntmg
as part
founded in 1977., to come and members of the Ohio demonstrate throu gh their
Movies
for having a loud exhaust
As a~ ex1stmg agency or as a -· from _Meigs County. c. E: ·
charitable
service
·and
volunNASCAR
B2 county agencx under _control Blakeslee was se lected for the House and Senate spotlighted teerism,'' Taft said. "These system. During a _search of
the vehicle's passenger and
of thts board,. CommJsstOn~r honor· in 1984 _
the achievements of ihe 13
Obituaries
individuats
make
Ohio
and
owner,
Larry V. Johnson. 55,
As Jm1 Sheets sa1d. The shenff s At the ceremon)':, Governor exceptional se_nio rs in their
commu·
n
ities
a
.better
our
Pomeroy, Gruber confiscated
or
ex1sllng Taft, Joan w. Lawrence, direc- congra tulatoly comments .
. Sports
B Section department
place
to
li
ve
and
I'm
proud
to
what
appeared to him to be
Em~rgency ~ed1cal Servtces tor of the Ohio Department of
"The group 'of men and
Weather
A8 department could be part of Aging. Alan Burnett, presi~ women being honored today honor \heir achievement as powdered cocaine and what
© 2005 Ohio Volley PubtisiUng Co.
Ple•se see til, A5
dent of the Ohio Association personify the spirit and civic
Ple•se see Inducted, A5
Please see Drvp. A5
BY BRIAN

CON.SUMER NOTICE

t
NATIONAL LEAGUE

2006 CDBG fo rmul a package of
$145.000 - a $9.000 cut rrom last
yea r's appropri ation for Meigs
. POMEROY - CongreS&gt; saved the County. according to County
Communi ty Development Bloc k - Commissioner Jerr Thornton. 'For the
Grant progra m from the Bush mlmin- past two years. the county has
istration's chopping block last 'lnonth. received $154,000 lhrough the pro. but Meigs County stands to lose .about gram. ~nd three· years ag~. received
$9,000 in formula fupdsfor local pro- $184,000.
.jects this year when compared to last
CDilG fo rmul a funds are disc reyear's appropri ation.
lionary - fund s. contro ll ed b)( cou nt y
Meigs County Commissioners co mmi ssioners and distri.buteu to
received llotification this week of a townsh tps and village s tor 1nfraBREED®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

ge n~ r atio n s

-tDtvtoron

Los Angeles
Texas
Oakland
Seattle

·I

REED

con~

13 .606 4 'h:

8

.

J.

BY BETH SERGENT

.735 -

.17 .485 8 ~
19 .424 10 ~
28 .235 17

16
• 14

.

BY BRIAN

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

18
19 .457 7
13
22 .371 10
Central Dlvlelon .

~-~
Cincinnati Reds pitcher Paul Wilson waits to be taken out of the game by .manager Dave Miley
in the sixtti in ning against the San Diego Pad res : Weqnesday in Cincinnati. Wilson wa~ the los~
ing pitcher as the Padres won 7~2
· _,
'

.
reprieve. Joe Randa grou nded

L. Pel

CDBG fQnds saved, but Meigs allocation cut by $9K

Commission Silver Bridge _Disaster affecting new generatiol18
Chri stri1as packages.
begins 911
interview s·
on '.
The
VanCoon'ey's tape al so
promotional Bridge
RACINE - The Silver sisl of stories of riding ferDi saotcr has affected ries
nuss the river and of
•
fasci
nated
and
tales
of
near' misses where
campaign
fro m both sides of the Ohio traffic lights turned red at the

Ea1t Dlvlalon

·•

.MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
BAmNG~ar.me·s. Colorado, .395;

• Eagles pound Miller for
sectional crown.
SeePage 81

American League
·

Carleton School holds
Mini-Relay For life, A3

-~-

- - -..,..___,__
•

�..

•

'
•

The Daily Sentinel

•

·

YageA2

Friday, May 13, 2005

New pastor install~d at Rutland church

Harriet Fulbright to speak
·at International Uleek in Athens
ATHENS
Harriet !he
Congre,sional
Ans den! ami 'L'holars from counFulbright. lifelong euucator Caucus ' was formed on 1ries throul!hnut the world lo
. and arts advocate. 11 ill be the Capitol Hill she was its firs! gather 10ge1her to cel~brate
keynote speaker for this assistant director. While living our lives and our cullures."
year's lliternarional Week in Korea. she taught English said Alan B()yd, director of
scheduled forMa\ 16-21. ·
composition and creative writ- lnternalional Student and
Fulbright is the ·pces ident of ing and in Moscow. she taught Facully Servi-.:es at ,. Ohio
. the Fulbri ght Int ernational lirsl graders to speak an4 read Universily. "During the week.
Center and-a n]emher of the English. She has also taughl we c:mlisten 10 !he wisdom or
JW
Fulbri2ht
Foreign art at several institution5.. in the int e rna~ional sc holar ....~ sing
Scholarships ' Board. which United State&gt;. She has a bach - ·and dance and enjoy the col .was established lw her late elor of arts degree from ors, foods and artifacts of the
· husband. Senat.or j_ William Radcli!Tc College and an .inas- world."
Fulbright. She will deliver. 1er.s degree in fine arts from . International Week IS an
"The Fulbri ght
Legacy : the
George
\Vashingron annual series of events spunOpening Minds" Monda y. University. '
sored by the ln rcrnational
May 16, at 8 p.m in the
This · year's lnlernalional Student Un'ion with the supWalter Hall Rotunda. The Week will focus on the· theme port of 'International Studenl
ev~nt is free and open to the . "Open .. Minds-Open Borders." and Facuhy Services. the .
public and . will be fol lowed The week· concludes with the Center for lnl ernational
by a reception.
24th Annual International Studies, the Ohio Pmgram of
· Fulbright has spent the Street Fair on Court Street Intensive English. Education
majority of her adult life in the from noon to 5 . p.m.. Abroad', Studenl Activities
fields of 'educarion and · the Saturday. May 21. The fair and 'the City or Athens. For
arts. As executive director of provides an opportunity for more informalion please visit
President
Clinlon's the community to enjoy the www.ohio.ed u/intlweek
Committee Jo.r the Arts and music, food ;md art of many &lt;http://www.ohio.edu/intlHumanities. she '""· instru - iillernational cultures.
week&gt; or conlact Krista
"International Week and the McCallum-Beatty, associate
mental in deycloping a wide
range of initiatives In . Street . Fatr otter a. umyue direclor · of International
American national policy tor opportunity tor the umversny. Student and Faculty Services,
the arts and humanities. When the city or A then&gt;&gt; and o~r stu- 7.10-593-4326.

RUTLAND
- Rurland
Churdi of the Nazarene
recently' inslalled a new paslor. rhe Rev. Mike Clark.
Central
Ohio
District
A"istant Superintendent Rev.
Herb Zuercher conducled the
lnstallalion ceremony .and the..
congregation ho-..ted a c~le­
bralion dinner immediately
following.
·
Clark. wife Angie and children Shaelic and Chandler
come to Rutland ..from
Corydon, Itid . where they
pastored Comtmmity of Hope
Church of the Nazarene. '
Angie enjoys singing. playing
piano and public speaking, as
. Rev. Mike Clark and family
well as entertaining and
.
workino with children.
Fire Departmenr's annual 41h amon-' you.'' (Joshmi 3:5)
Wccldy Sunday School ·
Uncle~ · its
leadership . . of July Ox Roast.
;u·e held at 9JO a.m.
Services
Rutlarid Nazarene has plans
Clark recently clmllenged
.for upcomin g summer activi- the church board to adopt a w ith worship beginning at
ties. inciLiding a .Pmriotic theme scnpture "Consecrate I 0:30a.m. Evening services·and
Celebration and other activi· yOLirselves, for tomom1w !he Nanrene Youth International
ti e~ to complimenl Rutland Lord will do· ama zing rhing s are held at 7 on Wednesdays.

Proud to be apart of your life.
The Daily Sentinel • Subscribe today • 992-2155 • www.mydailysentinel.com

Racine, 45771 or by calling
1-740-992-4580 no later than
May 20. Reservations are also
being taken by Rachael
Burbridge Lefebre at 7423099 and Virgil Reeves al
698-7275. Those unable to
attend the banquet are invited
to send their annual dues.
Cointributions are also being
accepted to the scholarship
fund. All checks are to be
made
payable
to
the
Harisonville-Scipio Alumni
Association.
·
· The alumni offifers are
R~chael Burbridge Lefebre ,
Larry Clark. Virgil Reeves
and Pauline I;lirchfield Parker.

,,,.

Powell's
FOODFAIR

Cohen's mtmstry included
door-to-door witnessing, oneon-one evangelism. and a
Russian book table on
Bri2hton Beach Avenue.
Brooklyn. In colder weath.er
Cohen distributed evangelislic literalure in area shopping
malls and even reached commulers lhrough . a literature
111
New
York 's
table
Pe~nsylvania
and Grand
Central rai lroad swtions. As a
result or these efforts many
unsaved Russian Jewish people have accepted Jesus as
their Messiah and are currently being discipled under
Chosen People Ministries'
ongoing work in the New
York I New Jersey areas.
The Cohens have relocated ·
to Florida to establish an
effective outreach to the
Jewish people there. Mr.
Cohen is a teacher of Jewish
evangelism, including teaching the local church body as
well as short:term summer
missionaries in Jewish evangelism. He has led evangeiistic teams for CPM's Summer
Training and Evangelism.
Program STEP both in the
United States and in Europe .
. Cohen's presentation at the
Middleport Church of Christ
·is called ·'C hrist in the
Tabernacle ." Refreshments
will be served .and a love
·
offering ·will be taken.

•••

•

Friday, May 13, 2005

.

Community Calendar

Bed-and-breakfast. owners
depend on guests to show

Spon,men\ at 6:~0 p.m . ~n Saturday and
Kids Fi shing Sunday .at the Long B'oltom
•
Day.
9
a.m.
to
noon
.
for
chilFreedom
Mi
ssion
on
County
Monday, May 16
POMEROY
-- Meigs dren lhruugh 15.· al I he club Road J I. Clyde Ferrell wil l
be the preacher.
DEAR AI313Y: I am a beJCounty Board of Elect ions pond.
only re-.:enlly moved back
Tuesday, May 17 ·
Sunday, May 15,
and-brcakl'a&gt;l owner. I have
meeting for official count and
here. Whenever Bernice and
CHESTER
- Past
POINT
PLEASANT. a 'trict two-week cancella , regular business ' 8:30 a.m ..
1
· ,.u ·' 1u a function of any
Councilors Club. of Chester · W.Va . - Evangell,t John
" she knows many peoboard office .
tion policy for res en aliun' .
kind.
LETART
. Letart Council 323. Daughters of Elswick will hold services at I have ju,l had a terrible
ple. She will stop and talk to
America. 7:30 p.m., al the the old log church on the expe rience with a gueq \\.r ho
Township Trustees will meet
1hcs.e
people, someumes for
Masonic building in Chester.
Dear
at4 p.m. at the office building. Each memoer should take a West Virginia S1a1e Farni ca nce·Jed five day' before he
'" long as 15 minutes, whde
Museum grounds near Poim was sc hed ul ed lo arrive.
Abby
I 'land and wait for her on
sa&lt;;k lunch and ·drink for Pleasanl. There will be spe : Ahby. I have only four gucsr
r'he side lines. Sometimes she
refreshmetils. which mem- cial singing. A carry-in din- rooms. When so meo ne canll'ill introduce me, but then
bers will exchange. Members ner will be held at noon . A cels. on shon . notice. I am
· !hey talk about their·churchshould take two or three gift s gospel sing will begin .al I unabl e 10 resel l !he roQm in
. ·
for the games.'
p.m. by Proclam , Aaron time. and I'm out one -quar- _ FED UP IN AR LI NG- es or business that I know
Saturday, May 14
Thursday, May 19
nolhing about.
Grat e. Rav ad Deloris
POMEROY
Return
POMEROY - The Meig s · Cundiff, and the Glory land Icr of my revenue for thai TON. TEXAS
This is the first time in my
Jonathan Meig s Chapter, County Retired Teachers will
night.
DEAR FED UP: Mu.st life I ·have been treated thi s
This particular guest had
,..
Daughters of the American meet itt noon a! the Riverside Believers.
reserved a room for lwo people unde rstand !h;il fulk s way. Lately I have avoided
Revolution , will meet a I Golf Course Clubhou se in
with dark glas&gt;es and white- ~oino places with her. How
nights . 1 told him he was lipped c;u{e s are blind. The
p.m. at the Pomeroy Library. · Mason. W. Va. The speaker
~ hould ·I handle this?
responsibl e and triel,i to . run
Michael Guliver, · Meigs will be Meigs County Sheriff
!he credit card he 'lleld the ind iv iduals .makin g !hose LEFT ·ouT
IN · LAS
County economic develop- Bob Beegle on " Protection
Tuesday, May 17
reservation with. It didn't "cule" commenls ma y have CRUCES
men! director. will be the Tips for Seniors...
POMEROY ·- Charles E.
·
cltall.enges of !heir o\vn ·- ·
·
DEAR LEFT OUT: If no
work . (Big surpnse!)
speaker. .
Blakeslee.
longtime
residenl
1
k
ignorance
or
a
poor
sense
of
'
one
has informed Bernice that
· am not out to. ma ·c peo- humor.
MIDDLEPORT
of Pomeroy, will observe his
uood manners dictate she
Ple·'s ltvcs diffi cull. but if
. Middleport Lodge :. 363, 95th · birthday on May
As I see it. 'vou have•sever- inrrnduce you when you go
they
don't
want
a
reserva:
F&amp;AM, special meeting,
Cards may be sent to him at tion at an independetil B&amp;B , al choices in handling the sitMonday, May 16
7:30p.m., to welcome Grand
the home of hi s daughter. they shouldn't . make one . uat.ion. Yolt can ask. "Wh)' do places 10gether, it 's time to ·
RUTLAND - TB office Jennifer Butcher, 3400 Wesl
rell her how uncomfortable
Master's class members of
Plea se spread the word you ask·?" You can inform yo u feel w~e n you are excludat
Rutland
.
Fire
staff
Middleport Lodge 363. An
Ridgewood Dr. , Rockporl . about how I his affects small- them thai you are blind. or
Department
•.
4:30
10
o
·'.Ill.
ed from the conversations.
education program for new
Ind. 47635.
busine ss people like me and igh&lt;lre !hem. Ju:;t because
And
if it continues, ask somemembers and any interested
•
Wednesday, May 18
many others . _ STIFFED someone asks you a yuestion
one
with
more soc ial serlsitiv·friends is planned. This is an ·
REEDSVILLE -. Walton IN ST..PAUL
doesn ' t mean you have to
ily .to accompany you to these
: open . meeting, and all
Matiley will be 9 1 on May .
DEAR STIFFED:
I'll respond.
function
s.
Masons and friends are invitABBY: A longtime
Saturday, May 14
18. Cards may be sent lo him
d 1he word as requesle d. r ·DEAR
sp,ea
d
''B
·
•·
d
1
d
Dear
Abby is written by
ed. Refreshments will follow.
LONG
BOTTOM
at 50974 State Route 68 1. . but perhaps you should counl n.en. . , ermc.c. an· allen ,
LONG BOTTOM
Revival services wil be held Reedsville, Ohio /f5772 .
your blessi~gs. If the card· plays. conce~t s and book Abigail Van Buren, also
was 110 good. how wo'uld you · rev!ew meetm,s togel her. We known as Jeanne Phillips,
have felt after· feeding and lr ve Ill a smaUtsh cny. Bernt~e and. was J01wded by her
lodging · lllis Jioor for two never kll lim c1ty and. thcrc- 11Uitil6r, Pauline Phillips.
Dear Abby
at
da s'l In the fu'ture •ou 'd be t.ore. she has many. old ,Write
.Y
.·
' ) . " . ft1ends. bus1ness assoCiates. www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Carleton School and Meigs wtse to venly the credtt-edtd ' h h ·oi l "t I,, t .
.Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
·
number as soon as a reserva- L u r~ c . CL gl e. · e t: ·.
lndustnes was one of three t' · . . . d It .11 ,
,
I lived 111 a large cuy and 90069.
schools in Meigs County ha - ton ts ma e: WI SdVC ,) ou
.
. .
.
.
.
a lot of gnef.
mg mtm·re 1ays 111 conJunctto
DEAR ABBY: I am legalWith the Me1gs Co~nty Rela Jy blind and wear sungla sses
for Ltfe thts week. The mint· all the time. I completely
EAGLES
. relays ,raise awareness and understand children asking
fu nd s for cancer research
me why ·I'm wearing su nand prevention. Eastern an g lasses, but · I feel adults
Southern Locaf school dis- should know. better. When a
triets also participated. The woman walks into a store
Meigs County Relay For Life with sunglasses and a whiteWelcomes Eagles, Guests and Ladies
wil l begin at 6 p.m today at tipped can'e. is n' t that obv i$10.00 Annual Membership
the Meigs County
ous enough? But I am fre· Card Required
Fairgrounds and continue
quemly asked smart queslOOO!o payout
uon s like . ''Are you famous
through Saturday·at noon.
submitted photo
· or something?" or "Who are ·
you hidin g tl·om?''
Sign up before 6:50 pm
Please inform your readers
Call992-9976 or
992-3660 lor
additional information
to the store without being
•
POMEIWY Parish leers to help tho se in need ,
The Chester' rresentation asked a thousand questions.
Nurse Lenora Leifheit p~e ­ and an integrator of faith will take place July 12-16
sented ·a program, "He lp and health. She told of and
a'
part . of
be
wirh Health Iss ues" at the thi') gS a care giver should do Chester/Shade Days, sponrecent luncheon meeting of such as organizing health sored by · Chester/Shade
the Meigs Retired Teachers. care information, not to Historical Association. Sayre
: held at Trinity .Church.
"pharmacy hop," and pre- told of different events to
· Leifheit said the pari sh pare fo r the unexpected. take place.
nurse ministry goes back to She reminded us that we
President Gay Perrin con1920, and uses the whole- should cotl'lplete advance ducted a brief business meet[lerson approach lo health directives, which have four ing . Eileen Bick gave devo- ·
- mind, body ·and soul in compo nents: choices about tions of poems about ' spring.
·_ thaf. it provide s services of a CPR , living wills, dwable Secretary and treasurer
·regular professional nurse, powers of attorney for reports were given. Cards
We remember those who have passed away
promotes health as a whole- health care, and organ and were signed by 17 members
ness, work s with the faith ·tissue donation .
for Carol Ohlinger. Martha
·
and are especially dear to'"us..
·
community, connec ts the
She ended her talk with Hoover. Barbara Tripp and
On Friday, May 27, we will publish a special page devoted to those who are gone but not
healing message of the th ese helpful hints: learn to Rosalie Story. ·
forgotten . They will be similar to lhe sample below:
Gospel to the practice of be tle xible, keep a se nse of
Debbie Roush mentioned
. nursi ng, provides a mentor humor, k~ep the faith and let the Medicare Pan D for
-and resource person and is go and let God.
2006. More information will
' 'OU "ish. ~h:ct one of the following FREE ~·erses below to
' grounded spiritually.
Dixie Sayre, accompanied be coming in May. .
Ja&lt;'ICUmlpuny· ~·our tribute.
The roles of the parish by Maxine Whitehead, sang
Nine members attended
. I. \Vc.hold you. in our .thnughl.~ and mrmork'!. fore ver.
nurse are health educator and danced to two songs the Ohio Retired Teachers
2. ~.J.J) God cmdl~ you in Hi'~ arm~. now and forever.
who 'provides opportunities from the Roaring ~20 's, and Association spring coferl Foren:r mh .,~·d. nc• cr for!,(utt..::n. 1\b) G~ hold you in the palm of
Hi~ ha nd.
Daviq C. A11&lt;lrews
for the congregation Ia explained that these routines ence. Perrin thanfl.ed all who
-l
Thank
~·ou for the wonderful J:~~' \\C ~hllred together. My pmyc:rs
July
10,
1961·May
5,
1980
learn about health . topic s will be part of the Ohio brought items for Serenity
will be "ilh you umil \1-c meet Jga1n.
:and issues , a health advo- Chautauqua, a cu ltural event House.
..
). The d&lt;Jy-. \\C '&gt;hared\o,'erc ~we!..' l. I long to "ee you again in God's
·cate who serves as a liaison pre se nted by the Ohio
Door prizes were awarded.
May God's angels
heaven!~ gfOry.
to connect people with Humanities Council and The The next meeting will be a
6. Your l'Duragl' and hra vl'ry -;rill i n ~pin~ u-; all : and t~e rtlCfTlory of your
guide you and
!'lmik till• u.. "ith joy and l;lllghtcr.
community ag·e ncies , !1 Ohio State Unive'rsity's noon luncheon on May 19 at
7.
Though out nf .. ighr. you' ll lilrC\crhe in my hcart imd mind.
voluteer coordinator who Humanities Institute. It will Riverside Golf Course.
protect you
15. The da~ · rna~ L"Oilk' and go. but tile tmlc' "e ~ha~ed "ill ,always remain.
recruits, prepares and over- be presented in six Ohio Sheriff Robert Beegle win ·
l/. ~la) the lrght of pt"arc !&gt;him~ on your face for eternity.
throughout time.
:sees congregational volun- cities, including C hester.
be the speaker.
Ill \Jay cw·~ :mgd' guide !OU:.md protect you throughout ume.
Forkeu Run
Public meetings · Ctub's
Annual

Clubs and.
·organizations

Birthdays

Other events .·

17:

• Hair Care &amp;. Makeup
• N'ai! Care
·FaCials&amp;. Waxing
·Massage
• Body Treatment
• Spa Packages

Specializing .in:

M-F

Saturday, May 14, 2005

.,Nurse presents program to retired teachers·

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iJ,.,...

Carleton School holds Mini-Relay For Life

•:mm• .

.ll.A .. rrc-A

' 0\1 1wr &amp; Audit)lngist

Voss completes Army training
GALLIPOLIS - Private
Timothy Edward Vo-s graduated from training in March
to become 'a 111ember of the
United States Army of 340
Delta
Company
1-329
Infantry.
He· completed 14 weeks pf
successful infantrY training at
Fort Benning, Ga.
Voss has been assigned to
the 10 I st Airborne Division
First 3:27 Bravo Company
Third Platoon at Fort
Campbell. Ky.
Voss i' a 2003 graduate of
Gallia
Academy
Hi gh
Pvt. .Tim&lt;1thy Edward Voss
School. He i' the ~on of Paul
and
Beverly
Yo»
aT and Margaret Eskew and
Faulkner
of
Gallipoli s and the grandson Charles
of Edward and Mary Yo", Pomeroy. His wife is Tracy.

Page:A3

The Daily Sentinel

•!!!!~ !®~~
!~H!J~B!It!l!

Diane McVey

700 East Main Street
Pomeroy, 'Ohio
740-992-5252
www.foodfairmk.com

Jewish evangelist to speak at
Middleport.Church of Christ
MJDDLEPORT
Israel
Cohen of the .Chosen People
Ministries which originated in
Brooklyn, N.Y. will bring the
message of the Good News of
Jesus Christ at 7 p.m ..
Wednesday, May 18 to !he
. Middleport Church of Christ.
· Cohen. who was raised in a
traditional Jewish home was
"born again" and become a
"child of God" in 1961. He
has committed his life to
communicating the Good
News ·Of Jesus the Messiah to
the Jewish people.
.
In 1975 , ten years after
being discharged from the
, Navy and after having held a
successful sales position in
the electronics ticld, Cohen
felt the call of God to attend
Bible college full-time. ·
While in Bible school Cohen
gained extensive experience
in Jewi sh evangelism, and
graduated. from Northeastem
Bible College in 1980 with a
B.A . in Biblical Literature.
Cohen and his wife, Judy,
joined the Chosen People
Ministries staff in 1978 and ·
began their .active ministry in
the Metropolitan New York
and New'Jersey areas helping
to establish CPM's ex&lt;titing
outreach in Brighton Beach.
Brooklyn where 150,000
Russian Jewish people reside.
Using every means available to spread the Gospel ,

'

Church events

Hanisonville alUmni
reunion planned
HARRISONVILLE- The
74th annual dinner of the
Harri sonvil le-Scipio Alumni
Association will be held at the
Center locnled al 36008 State
Route 143 :· just a half mile
east of yhe Harrisonville
inlersection .
A business meeting and
entertainment will follow the
di•mer. The dim1er charge is
$10 for adults. $g for children
under 13, and the annual dues
are $2.
Classes 10 be honored, are '
1925, 1935. 19.45 and 1955.
Reservaions are to be mailed
to Pauline Birchtield Parker
at 34120 Pine Grove Road.

. ..

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~
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.

COOLVILLE- Charlotte
Norton · was welcomed as a
new member at' this week's
· meeting of Tops 2013 at the
: Torch Baptist Church.
'· · The weekly best weight
loser, J'v1ertle AlkU:e received a
certificate and fruit basket. ·
Comest winners for completing
exercise charts for April were
. Connie Rankin, Donie Bond,
: Sandee Wright, Joan Cole and
· Judy Morgan. The winners for
,April food charts were DotHe
Bond, Joan Cole, and Cmdy
Hyde, and a perfect anendance
award went to Tommy Scyoc.
. The Area Recognit.ion Day
: observance to be held in
: Lancaster on June 4 was discussed. Leader Pat Snedden
read an article from Dr.
Howard Rankin Book called
"Take time for yourself. the
choi~e is yours...
.
. . Tops meets every Tuesday
· at the Torch Church and anyone interested is invited to
attend a free meeting or cap
contact Pat Snedden at 6622633 for information.

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~~~We .. c~d thr~ mc~~agc vo~th a IU\Ing l.i~~ for etern al reMand happines~.
I 5. Ma~ the Lord hie!&lt;..' ~ou with Hi' grant-. and wann. loving hcan.

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With Fondest \lemories
111 Cuurt Street • Pomeroy, OH 45769
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II . You &gt;1crc J ·lr!!ht in our !ifc that hum~ fore&gt;er in our hearts.
, I~ ~lay Glld\ g;a~·c, ..hinc- o~c-r !OU for all time.
1 .~. 1\•u ;ur rn uur thought~ ami pr;Jycr~ frum morn ing trJ'Jlight and from

�PINION

The Daily Sentinel
'

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-215.7
www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher .

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress slzall make IJO ·./au• respecting an
establishment of religion, or prollibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of tlre,pr¢ss; or t;lte right of tlte
people peaceab~J' to assemble, and to petition
the Governme11t for a redress of griet1a11ces.
.·•

-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

..

READERS' VIEWS

Issues

~larjfies police complaint

Friday1 May 13, 2005

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WHEN D1D

YOUR DAD

FIRST EXPLAIN
SOCIAL SECURITY.

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The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Policy

{USPs 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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Harry W. Richard
PORTLANQ - Harry W Richard , X6, of Portland , died on
Wednesday, May II , 2005. at Riverside Methodist Hospital In
Columbus.
.
.' .. He was born Au g. 25 , I'! I X. · in Si lvenon, W.Va .. s01i ·of
, Floyd and Lucy Ward Richart!. He was a veteran of the U.S .
Army during World War II, wa' a former employee of Uni ted
Dairy Co. us a field representative and pl&lt;int manager. He'""
an avid farmer for many years. He was a member of the
Tuppers Plains VFW Post 905J and Middleport Feeney·
Bennett American Legion Post 128. He was abo a me1i1ber of
the RoUJid Table at McDonald's in Ravenswood, W.Va.
Surviving are h1s wife of 58 years. Genevieve "Genny"
, Nuzum Richard: his children: Robert Richard of the home,
Jack Richard of Long Bottom, and Barbara McLaughJin and
her husband: John of Tennessee: a sister. Elsie Bosworth Df
Ripl ey, W.Va.; se ven grandchildren: Woody, Janice. Leslie. '
Joey; Hollie, Da;id and Joelle: and nine great grandchildren.
·Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by his son,
Lester Richard ; a brother, Carl: and a sister, Mable.
Services will be held at I p.m. on Sunday, May 15, 2005, at
Rou sh Funeral Home in Ravenswood , W.Va. , wih Rev.
Lawrence Conger, Jr. , officiating. Burial will follow at Letart
Falls Cemetery, with military rites to be conducted by VFW
Post 9053 of Tuppers Plains.
Friends may call from 6 to 9 p.m. on Saturday at Roush
Funeral Home,

COLUMBUS - Anianda Ruth Hollman. 43, Columbus,
formerly of Pomeroy, passed a"'ay on Saturday, May 7. 2005
at Riverside Methodist Hospital in Columbus.
She was born on September 21, 1961 in Gallipolis, Ohio to Fnmk
and Carol Spence Sisson. She worked as a Medical Assistant. was
a mem.ber of the Grace Episcopal Church in Pomeroy, and a Past
Honor Queen of Job's Daughters of Bethel #62, Middleport.
Besides her Parents she is survived by her hu sband. Todd
Hoffman of Columbus, and sisters, Angela Louise Marnell , of
Texas. and Amy Danielle Ferguson Of New Have.n, W Va.; her
,father and mother-in-law, Allen and.Connie Hoffman, Galloway,
sister-in-laws and brothers-in-law, Tony a and Todd Quickel and
Traci and Jason Burley, and several nieces and nephews.
She was preceded in death by her maternal grandparents,
Floyd and Elsie Spence and paternal grandparents, Ralph and
Alice Sisson.
Memorial services were held at I p.m. on Wednesday, May
II, 2005 at Fisher Funeral Home in Pomeroy. In lieu of !lowers donations may be made to the National Kidney Foundation,
30 East 33rd St: , Suite II 00, New York, NY I 0016.
Friends may send online condolences to www.fisherfuneralhomes.com

TO YOU?

A moving gjft

Lel/ers to the editor are welcome. They should
he less than 300 words. All letters are subject to
editing and must be signed and include address
and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters ·should be in good taste,
addressing·issues, not personalities.

. SYRACUSE -· Beverly Ann Chapmcrn, 66, Syracuse,
passed away on May II. ~005. at her residence.
She was born on August 3.. 1938, in Pomeroy, daughter uf
the late Chester,and Margaret Hunnell Iutton. She was a graduate of Pomeroy High School and a member of the Pomeroy
Chun;h of Christ.
She js survived by her husband, Roher! R. Chapman,
· Sy~acu se;. children. Bobbi Kay !Perry) Hill. Letart Fall s and
Lon B. Hrll , Rac1ne: and grandchi ldren. Dean V. (Jayne) Hill.
Harmony J. (Scott) Brinager. Autumn B. Hill (Travis Lisle).
Jeri Mich,e lle HilL Mallory Jo Hill: great grandson , ·\Crii7
Robert Brinager: sisters, Sandra (Bill) Bret z. Colum bus:
. Candice (Dan) Wellman. Gallipolis; Sherry (Jack) Ritchie .
. Racine: several niece&gt; and nephews.
Services will be held at II a.m. on Saturday. May 14. 2005. at
Fisher Funeml Home in Pomeroy. Ofticiating will be Rev. Bob
Robinson and btuial \viii be in . Rocksprings ·Ccme1ery. Pomeroy.
Friends may call 7to 9 p.m. on Friday, May 13. at the funeral home.
On-line condolc.nces may be &lt;e nt 10 wwwJisherfuneral·
homes .com
·

·Amanda Ruth Hoffman

Life

LETTERS TO THE '
EDITOR

Paychecks bounce, ·employees latlJ off at New Haven plant

Beverly Ann Chapman

When the Rev. Max
What's happenii1g to cause that the mo st impl'!riant
D&lt;&gt;wcll was rector of Christ
1his startling church dropout things in life take place
Ep"copal Church in Shaker
rate among men''
arou~1d the 'dining table,''
Hei ~ hl s. Ohio, he would
It 's a question that Demos said Shakarian, who grew up
stand in the church parking
Shakarian asked himself - in the Armeman Pentecostal
lot lln Sunday mornings as
when. he was attending an church.
.
the, fa th ers were dropping
George
evangelistic tenl meeting. As
After .d inner,_ Sh~karian
their children off at Sunday
Plagenz
the wealthy Cali forni a dairy- got the 1dea ol· askmg the
School.
·
man looked out over the men at the tables 1f they had
·The men were intending to
jam'- packed tent, he was anythi11g ·to ·share ·. abou t
turn around and go .liume but
struck by whai he &gt;'tt w: ."what , wonderf~1l thm&amp;? the
they never cver1 got their
ht 1990. a church sociolu · "Paste l dn::sses. flowered Lord has done lor you.
cars 11110 rcvcr&gt;e he fore Max. · giq round Ihut 40 percelll of dresse' ... I 0 womelt to
''For an hour or so, said
~&gt;uuld thru st his hand the men he polled had some every man.
Sh~karian, "one man after
He mentioned this to a another came up to the front.
through the open window on 'kind of church relationship.
the driver's side. grab tlie That figure has slipped to 26 clergyman friend of his. He We heard stories of marwould-be escapee by the arm percent.
.0was told ihal "most men con- riages hea led. alcoholi sm
and lead them to the church
The situation is even sider religion .:. something · overcome .. estranged busib·JSement
· htenmg
·
for women and children."
ness partners reconciled.
'· .
· .
worse 1han these fng
There in the furnace ro?m figures would indicate.
Shakarian , who was 10 go The combined effect was
If you want to discover on to found the Full Gospel more powerful than any ser(where a _lot ~I men 1eel
more at home than 111 ~he whether your church is the Business Men's Fellowsb ip mon I've ever heard. ".
v.~ll - apporntcd
pan sh • "meat and potatoes" type lnternalton al (FGBMFI) ,
The FGBMFI, forerunner
lounge) they chewed the fat that appeals to men. don't concluded that ministers of today's all-male Promise
about religion and related · couni the number of males in don' t know the language of Keepers, is now a worldwide
top ics. Dowell .cal·led Ihem the pews. Many a man is in the bu~incssman. He began tellow~hip of Chri stian men
the. "Furnace Philosophers." church on Sunday morning dream ing of an organization - primarily evangelical and
Is this what we need to get on ly because his wife and . tha ~ would make God rea l charismatic. Business and
m~n to go to church - a children are therf:.
and ali;c in "the world a profess ional ·women can
gathering of fumace philosoTh, real test is: How many man knows. "
now belong but the memberphers in the church basement men are in church by themThe FGBMFI got its start ship [s predominately men
on Sunday _mornings?
se lve&gt; as compared to the at a free chi cken dinner pro- - laymen . Ministers can
Getting men to church rs a number of women who are vided by Shakarian for 100 join, but can't hold office.
(Georg&lt;' Plage,iz, is an
job that ~1eeds doing. Fewer there alone? The proporJion businessmen at · Knott 's
and fewer men are occupy- of wome n to men in that cal- Ben-y Farm in Anahe'im. ordained minister and veteri,ng the pews in · today's culatJOnwould be closer tO 8 Calif.. in 1953.
a11 neiVsman
based m
churches.
to 2- or even 9-1.
"Every Armenian knows Co/w(lbus.)

Dear Editor:
After reading Pomeroy Village Counci l f!oli~e Officer
Complaint in the May I 0 issue. I feel a couple of issues need
to be further add ressed.
. First, the unprofessional complain t I ' made against
Officer Allen Queen stems in part from his stateme nt , "For
what you did, I could put ymr on the ground and put a gu n
to your head. "
Not only do I teel this is unprofessional conduct, this conduct cannot ever be permit.ted by any pol icc officer.
Second. one might questio11 why I was even traveling .,
village streets at 2 a.m. To answer that. I was called at my_
reside111:e to come and briefly assist at my business on ·.
·Main Street. ·1 was ticketed for an ill egal left turn onto
West Main Street.
Sonny Gloeckner '
Pomeroy

Dear Editor:
On Mother's Day in church. a lady. aged 91. gave the
congregation a r~al gift. After passin'g out Mother's Day
!lowers, Nick Ihie asked 'her to sing a little song. Well. ·she
did, and it was wonderfuL .Thank you. Mildred Shuler, for
your song.
.
~
A short time later. after the church service. Nick lhle died.
All who were there at church were very sad and will miss him.
His last hours were filled wllh joy.
U11da McTumer
Racine

Obituaries

Getting men to church

The Daily Sentinel

..

Jl:i~J\1J----~--~-F-n_n_a_y_,_M_a_)_'_13_,_2_o_o_s____~----------------------~~----\-~---·m__y_d_al_ly-·s_e_n_t_in_e_L_c_on_1__________~~--~T--h_e_D_a_i~ly_s_e_n_t_iJ-1e_I_•_P_a_g_e_As
__

,

((1/flfilllillllllt

Crunch time for the European Union
Later this month, French
voters will decide whether
they approve of the constitution that has been drafted for
the European Union. All
E.U. members must approve·'
i't if it is to take effect, and
the approval of ·France,
which .is one of the Union's
largest and most influential
members. is particularly
important.
A negative vote by the
people of some smaller,
more peripheral E.U . member. such as Denmark, might
not · be fatal ; there could
always be another vote later
on. when the Danes were in
·a better mood. Bui rejection
of the constitution by France
would be well-nigh fatal to
the hopes of enthusiasts for a
Greater Europe. and dozens
o( poll s indicate that a
majority of French citizens
are leaning toward reJection.
What makes many French
voters wary of approving the
E. U. constitution is not any
residual fondness for the
United States. but a wellfounded fear that the E.U.
bureaucracy,
based
in
Bru;sels. may try to strip
countries in Europe of their
cushy pension plans, long
vacations and generous welfare benefits in pursuit of a
leaner. meaner and hence
more competitive continental economy. Some public
opposition is a direct back·
lash
against
President
Jacques Chirac's handling of
'their national economy.

William
Rusher

But pushing French citizens
in the other direction toward
approving the constitution is
the widespread disapproval of
George W. Bush's various.
foreign policy initiatives.
beginning .with the inva~ion
.of Iraq . and suspected to
include military designs on
Iran and even North Korea.
The vote's outcome is still
uncertain. huwever. Despite
the French public's general
attitude. France 's major
political
parties
favor
approving · the constitution,
and so (most important of
all) does President Jacques
l:::hirac. Moreover, Germany,
another enormously impor:
tant E.U. member, is scheduled to vote on the question
shortly l)efore France, and
Chancellor
Gerhard
Schroeder (who favors
approval) has taken tbe precaution of arranging ;hat
German ratification will be
determined by a vote of the
·Bundestag. which he controls, rather than by the
German people. It is thought
that German approval: coming just before the French
vote. may nudge undecided

French Citizens in the Western
Europe,
the
desired direction.
European Union may soon
Whal Americans ought to · find itself fighting for its
think: about all this depends very identity against a rival
on what they think about the whose extremists are far
long-range cintcntions and more pernicious than the
impact of the European United States.
·
Union. The increasing inlerGlobally, Ru ssia might
nationalization of commerce initially welcome the ·emer·
has made a cenain amount gence of a united Europe as
of European unification. (a9 a counterbalance fo the
in the adoption of a common United States. But. in the
the
Euro) long run. the fact that
currency,
inevit.ablc, and probably Europe is so close to Russia
desirable. In addition, it has is likelY. to make it more of a
always seemed to me that problem for Moscow, both
many Europeans, especially politicalty and economically,
in nations that were once and perhaps in .the long run
Great Powers themselves, even militarily, than the
are absolute! y bound to want .more. distant United St~tes.
to coalesce in a continental Conversely. 'if Russia were'
bloc to try to balance and to regain a portion of its for·
ri~al the otherwise. 'overmer superpower status, the
whel~ing political and eco·
European Union might well
nomic (not to mention mili- seek, as in the Cold War,
tary) predominance of the protection in a closer relaUnited Statesz This is only tionship with Washington.
human, and there is no point
The growing power of
in resenting it. On tlie other . China, too, is likely to prove
hand. many of the sinaller a two-edged sword from the
European nations may want standpoint of the European
·to pl~y the two sides against Union. It might toy with the
each other, or even throw in idea of playing Beijing ,
with U ncfe Sam
against Washington. But the
Just as imponant as . ihe peoples of Western , Europe
pending vote is considering would hardly welcome a
the repercussions of having a world in which their nations
unified Europe as a major found . themselves in some
player in the worldwide sort of,de facto alliance with
arena - for the United China against the United
Slates. and the union itself. ' States.
I
Witllin European Union,
(1Villia(11 Rusher ts a
there is the problem. at least Distinguished Fellow of the
currently, of the Muslim Claremont Institute for the
challenge. Given the current . Study of Statesmanship arui
influx of Muslims into Political Philosophy.)

•

Jon Michael Freeman

LANGSVILLE - Jon Michael Freeman, 49, of Langsville,
died Tuesday May I0, at is residence following an extended.iII ness.
Born April II. 1956 in Gallifolis the son of Richard K. and
Alice M. Garl~sky Freeman o Pomeroy. He worked for AEP
for 26 ·years and was a riverboat pilot. He was a member of
Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Pomeroy and a graduate of
Meigs High School.
Besides his paren~s he is survived ·by his Fiance Shirley
Buckner. of Langsville: brother. Dr. Joseph Freeman. of
South Bloomdale. and severalunts·. uncles and cousins.
Several Aunts UnCles and Cousins.
. A Memorial Ma,~&gt; will be held . IOa.m. Saturday at Sacred Heart
Catholic Church in Pomeroy. Rev. Father Waller Heinz will offici·
ate. Fisher Funeml Home in Pomeroy is in charge of armngements.

BY TIM MALONEY
Walker. prc.,idcnt ol · the
TMALDNEY@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM Llnited , Steelworker&gt; of
America Local 5171. 'aid that
NEW HAVEN - More 1he international wa&gt; calkd
than l 00 employee&gt; uf Global when the payc·IIccb hu\I.nced .
Industrial Produch in New and that employe~' ,rre worHaven.
the
former ried 1hat l:lannai h&lt;r&gt; wt tn
Hi ghlanders Alluy&gt; LLC. make a paylllent on· their
have been laid off as the health insurance which i' due
bcleagurcd cm1tpany under- 01i Monda y. ·
goe~
anoth er
I inancial
Walker s11id the intcr'nauon.
episode.
· al warned Bannai llwt I here
Pavch cch bounced last would he a str ike if he did not
week be lor~ the employees meet payroll or m~kc th ~ pciv were Juid oil on Suitdav.
mentlm th~ hectlth 111st1 rance.
Owner B(Jris B·um{ui. an
--strike iS a dirt\ woal tu
Israeli national. blamed the me:· Walker said . ·.. w~ don't
layoffs on dillieu lty wi.th want to gl&gt; on ,;trike."
tra11sporting· raw matenals 111
The layoffs anJ bou ncrng
the alloy plant.
paychecks are ye t a nut her in a
'·We don't get sufficie nt series of problems which. ha ve
supply because of trucking · plagued the New H;twn plant
problems." Bannai said. "We since Bannai purcha sed it for
cannot ma intain production . 52 million in 2001 . after' the
nu mi.lterial. "

Two

Bannai said ·that all of til~
employees h;rve· bee n paid
·'The problem has· been
.totally taken care of.", he s~id.
On the qther hand. Paul
'

:-,hut down until th e money

i~ :-.ue~ ~lre re~olvcd.
··1, "ee a long-term

v.-a~ rai~ed .

work

interruption:-;

malion from Bannai .

occurred in 2002 when the
"I don't approve ·OI ·what ·
p!airl suffereu a power outage he 's ctping .. &lt;rnd no nne else
and tben a surge thai blew out appro\'e&gt; of what he 's doi ng.''
two suhstations. and v. hen the he s;\id. ·.
. company failed to pay ils bill
Despite the prohkm ,, .

n ee d ~ tn make improvement:-.

to it s ha~ houses. or filt e rin~
&gt;ystems.· "'that less clu,q and
smoke i' emitted. whic·h the
eii'tployc:c, h.1ve, In hreathe,
he 'all!.

Police still waiting on Davis results Report: Ohio squ~d takes heavy hit in Iraq
Bv DIANE PonoRFF'

DPOTIORFF@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM
POINT PLEASANT Official&gt; in Point Pleasant
and Charleston still do not
kn ow what kill ed a Point
Pleasant woman, more than
two weeks after her death.
Stephanie Davis, 25. was
found in the li vi ng room of
her home on Monroe Street
April 26. Her death is being
investigated as suspicious and
her body was sent to the
Medical Examiner's office in
Charleston for an autopsy.
Investigators with the .Point
'. Pleasant Police Department
are at a standstill in the case
as they wait for the resu lts of
the tests, according to Chief
R.D. Spencer.
"These things take time,"
Spencer said . "Justice is not
swift. "
Spencer has been in contact
with Davis' family, who have
been calli ng him to check on
the progress of the case .
"The family has been hearing rumors about her death,"
he said. "My job is on the
facts. not rumors.''
He also said the police

department has been foll owing up on tips and lc,)ds but
they ar,e anxious to get the
ruling of how Davis died.
"I .lldle to keep stirr[ng
things up. but once we get ·a .
rulmg on her death. we will let
everyone know." Sp«ncer said.
According to a spokes·
woman for the We'l Virgini&lt;t
State Medi c:d Examiner's
Office, the cause of death has
not been determined. pending
the · results of a toxicology
· repor1.
The tests ·that are being performed depend upon the cir- .
cu.mstances surrounding the
death . she said. Each case i&gt;
different and can take a long
.time to investigate.
Fluids such as blood. tirine
and ga,tric ·contents collected
· from the autopsy were taken
to the state's lab located in
South Charleston, the spokes·
· woman said . The fluids are
heing tested for different
things. including drugs.
Testing usually wkcs about
six to 12 weeks. depending 011
·the backlog of cases at the
lab, 0he said. Investi gating
and determining the manner
of deatli wuld take longer.

Clairsville.
Each inductee was pres~nt­
ed a large framed photogwph
with .commenta.ry on accomfrom Page A1
plishments during the cere·
inony
and rhany received
inductees into the Ohio
Senior Citize.ns Hall of recognition from their state
repres~ ntuti ve.s.
. Fame. ~~
Haw kins was presented
Inducted bes ides Hawkins
framed
certificates of i'ecog were Edith J, C.layton of
mtion
by
representatives Joy
,
Yopngstown, Nada Dunn of
Celina, Jean Garner of Upper Padgett of the General
and
Jimmi e
Sandusky, Dr. Jon Hendricks A&gt;sembly
Stewart
of
the
Ohio
House.
of Toledo, Martha Monnin of ·
Padgett
commended
Hawkins
Kettering, Rosalie Morgan of
Hillsboro. Anne T. Nixon of on "her remarkable humaniAkron, Reuben &amp; Dorothy tarian concern and service to
community." while
Silver of Cleveland Heights. the
Jerry D. Smart of Springdale,
Alfred Tibor of Columbus•
and Eloise S. Wolfson of St.

Inducted

from PageA1

Scholarship applications available

the 911 operation. Sheets said.
Other business
SYRACUSE - Applications . for the 2005-06 Carleton
Commissioners acknowl·
Memorial Scholarship for Higher Education-are available in edged donations toward the
· the office· of Syracuse Clerk-Treasurer Sharon Cottrill at the renovation of the Meigs
.Syracuse Municipal Building. The deadline for returning County Jail from First
applications is June 17 .. Applications may be turned into · Southern Baptist ' Church.
Cottrill who is also Secretary of the Carleton College Board of Star Grange, Racine. Grange,
Trustees or Robert Wingett, President of the Carleton College Lee Richards, Jim Will. and
· Board 'ofTrtJ~tees. Legal residents of Syracu·se can qualify for James J. Proftitt .
scholarship awards for a maximum of two years.
Commi .ssioners
alse
· approved payment of bills in
the amount of $454.933.27.
eve~ing
with 307 entries re,corded.
Prese nt. in addition to
OOMEROY - Meigs County Health Department will o_ffer
Davenport
and Sheets. were
evening clinic hours from 4 to 6 ·p.m. on Tuesday. Services
Commissioner
Jeff Th01:nton
available will include childhood and adult immunizations.
blood pressure and blood sugar screcni_ngs. WIC i~formation and Clerk Gloria Kloes.
· and educational service~. prenatal services, head hce screenings and eradication education, environmental health, vaal
statistics and answers to general health-related questions.

Offer

Bannai 'aid the plant will
continue to be viable in the
future. and that the employees
will be called hack to work'"
~ou n a.-, the tran~ portation

fulllrc
When the company missed here for everybody who wants
anotltcr payday in - August to work.'' he said. "As soon as
2002. employees went on \Ve n.:nrganiLe and readjust.
sirikc. Operat ions re,umcd we'll tie back on."
after a payme nt agreement
Members of Local 517·1
was worked qut buJ stopped h av~ been meet ing "ju&gt;t abo~t
again in Februury 2003 after eve ry My.'' during the work
wnrk~rs l,l'alked out over . no t , stoppage. Walker said. The
be ing paid.
·
union is ·curren'tly in the midW;dker said un ion members die of a fi ve-year contract that
were ve ry up,et when the runs from April 29. 2002 10
paychecks bounced again Ja,t April 29. 2007.
week.
"The imernational is light- ,
"Put yo urself in our shoes ening the strin gs on Bori s:·
and yo u'd know how we Walker said. "We have a con·
,
feel:· he said . "To put it mild- · tral'l to go by...
ly, we were mad ."
ln'additi on to payroll, safeThere i s no point _
in bringing previou,\i owner. · American
Walker said it is very diiTi- ty is a big issue 'at the plant,
people in to work if there is Alloy&gt;. went banknrpt.
cu lt to gel any reliable infor· We~lker &gt;aid. The company

COLUMBUS (AP) - Si' Marine re serve unit l1ad been
·Marines were killed and killed or relea'e any names.
another 15 were wounded
Bowman said the unit is in
from one central O,hio squad the procc» of· contacting ;tncl
in a major U.S. offensive near helping the affected families.
lra4's . bortlei· with Syria. a
The U.S. military has connewspaper· reported Thursday. fin~1cd five Marine deaths so
The squad that absorbed the far and savs about 100 insurcusualtics was one of three gents ha ve been killed in the
belonging to the Ist Platoon of · operation- one of the largest
Lima Cpmpany, Jrd Battalil!,ll. U.S. offensives since Fallujah
25th Regiment. according to was reclaimed from militants.
It was launched after U.S.
The Washington Po&gt;l. which
has a reporter embedded with intelligence showed large
. numbers of insurgents had
Operation Matador.
Chief Warrant Officer Orrin mo\'ed into the northern
Bowman , the site commander Jazirnh Desert fo llowing loss·
for the Columbus-based com- es in Falluj;\h and Ramadi, fur.pnny. confirmed Thursday ther east. The area is believed
that the company is participat- to be a staging ground for faring in the operation and had eign fighters crossing into Iraq
taken casualties. He declrned from Syria along anc ient
to say how many frcim the smuggling routes.

Drugs
from Page A1 r' . .
'

.Proffitt called a "large
chunk" of crack cocaine.
At the time of .the traffic
stop Johnson's vehide was
being driven by Sandra
Morgan, 44. Pomeroy.
Stewart noted the · '·positive
difference" she is making ·in
her community, and commended her on her " unwaverin g dedication to service."
Going to Columbus for the
even t were Beth Theiss.
direc tor of the Meigs County
Council on Aging, Darla
Hawley, and Diai\a Coates
who nominated Hawkins for
the honor: family members,
Gene Hawkins . Jim Smith.
and Regina Simpson .and
daughter, Tiffany; and Dan
and Donna Jean Smith, Patty
Pickens, Jean Seidenable .
and Nancy Pickens.

Morgan was placed under
arrest for allegedly operating
a vehicle while under th e
intluencc of alcohol and open
container in a motor vehicle.
Johnson was arrested for
alleged possession of cocaine
and open container in &lt;i motor
vehicle.
·
reported
that
Proffitt
Johnson was given a 72 hour
notice of forfeiture regarding
his vehicle from which
alleged drug paraphernalia
was seized.
Assisting Gruber was
Pomeroy Assistant Police
Chief Joe Kirby, Jr. and
Patrolman Josh Ridenour.
.

.

Keeping Meigs
County informed
The Daily Sentinel .
Subscribe today

992·2155

7

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
HOTLifJE
FRI 5/13/05 · THURS 5119/05

446·4514 MOVIE

Box Off1ce OJMtnS @ 6:30PM Nightly
&amp; 12:30PM lor Sat &amp; Sun Matinees
KICKING &amp; SCREAMING jPG)

911

Local Briefs

to American Electric Power.
Paycheck&gt; bounced in June ·
of 2002 and state and federal
labor ofllci ab took the ('0 111 ·
pany to court. The pl~\nt wa"-~

mes

Tri pie Threat
Classic Rock ,&amp; .
Country Band
SATURDAY, MAY I 4TH 9:30 - I :30

~;;,·••u

Couple

$3.00 Si

7A • Pomeroy,

1: 0 3:00 7:00 &amp; 9:00
MONSTER IN LAW (PG13)
1:15,3:15, 7:15&amp;9:15
UNL:EASHED (R)
1:30, 3:30, 7:30 &amp; 9:30
HOUSE OF WAX (R)
1:20, J :30, 7:20 &amp; 9:30

KINGDOM OF HEAVEN (R)
1:00, 3:40; 7:00 &amp; 9:40
XX)(: STATE OF THE UNION
(PG13) 1:15, 3:15,7:15 &amp; 9:15
A LOT LIKE.LOVE (PG 13)
" 1:10, 3:10,7-:10&amp; 9:10 .

hours

TB staff visits·
&amp; .\tEDICAL EQLIP~I E~T

POMEROY - Meigs County Tuberculosis Office will be at
·. the Rutland Fire Depanmem from 4:30 to 6 p.m. on Monday
at the Chester Fine Department from 4:30 to 6 p.m. on May
23. Que~tions shuuld be directed to the TB office at992-3722 .

For the Record
Marriage license
POMEROY -A marriage !icense was issued in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court to Chad DavJd ·Manm, 26. and
Jennifer Sue Sheets, 26, both of Albany.

'
• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen

• Nebulizers
• Eleclrk Beds
• Wh..,lchairs
• Diaprrs
• Cbux

• Medicare/Medicaid

We do th• billing locally

740-446-0007
ToU Free 877-669-0001
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
Lm:ally

own~d.

CADIA COUNTRY FAI
nu'uSE

Saturday, May 14, 2005 from 1-4 PM
FUN fOR THE ENTIRE FAMiLY! .
Petting Zoo,
Carnival Games with Prizes,
Pony Rides 1:10- 1:00PM
Kiddie Tractor Pull 2:00 Pl't'
Making Homemade Ice Cream 12:10-2:00 PM
Jarvi's Family Sing,1:00-2:00 PM
Rocky Mountain Bluegrass 2:10-l:10PM
BRING YOUR

For More Information Contact:
Kathy McDaniel
Arcadia Nursing Center

LAWN CHAIR

Coolville, OH

Kt- carr: ubout yua!

\

�I' .

•

PageA6
'

FAIT

The l_Jaily Sentinel

THE WORD OF GOD PROVIDES
and d11nlx·d to the cd~e ,,f 1t'
lc.il II 11',1, Sh) r.1h Th~ nnle""'111 .utd fl1111l nl lirJ.J II\ com- ·
Ill~

Ulll

ut hl'r

l"O\.'l\01; \\I!IC

her to
c:otitam
she
pumped
her
little
Thom
·
1\'tng' up ,md dm1 n until the)
Mollol'lan leave' about hun. he 'd\\ tilled\\ ith tluu.l and h.ld d11ed
,some other dirysalisc' hut Then. fUst '" she "as dhout to
also saw some other c:aterpil - t.tl..e her lirst lltght. sllc paused.
la• s looktng as 'urpmcd .md ,,td lot all her brothers .md stsas pamed as hun
tet s who \\ere tlll!-. ~ing out on
so he began to smg. too
Peger sighed heavily ,tt the
But when he saw the sneers 1oss of' h1s stster,
·
Shyr.t h.•111d~ o f- tht~ ama711H! moment vet 1?1td
and heard the smckcnng ot others. He even shed a tear or for all those\vho we1c the1e
She . spread· her wmgs and
those around hun, hts song two. But then he shru gged his
l;1unched
her,ell up and a11 ay
would fade and a won·ied and little caterptllar shou lders and
weaned look wou ld tum his resumed eatmg like nothing from the leaf on whtch she had
handsome caterpillar counte- had happened. ,Well. at least li1ed for such ,1 long t1me
nance IntO a study of awkward for a little wh ile. It wasn' t long Exu lt ing 111 he1 new anll tr~ttl'\­
until he began to feel strange torme:J hie. she sped .tway ·mto
ambtvalence.
As the hours passed into inside again. only th JS t•me 11 the sapph1re blue sky. the dll
days. she sang and waited for was not a gohd thmg .tbout her i"J IIed wnh the soog
the day when her dreams Someth111g w.ts wron~ but he of "clory t11.11 she s,mg
"He that \Vdvers ts like a
would be realized while he didn' t know what. Pam begw1
fretted and wondered what oth- to r;tdiate out f10m the s01 e wave of the sea dlwcn 1~1th the
ers were thmking of him.
spot on hiS back but soon gave wmd and tossed. F01 kt not
Fm.illy.. as the e,u·ly.mommg way to excw n atJng agony that · nMn think th.tt he shdll
sun began to peep JUst over the w1thm Qtuckly. hJS strenuth tece tve ~my thtng. o l the Lmd
p;Jlc eastern horizon. a distant faded antl he would have fallen A tloub le mmded man IS unst.t
dt on mg was heard. No One f1om h1s leaf had hts little ble 111 all lm ways· (J.tmes
knew what the sound was. nor caterptllar wes not been I :6b-9). But "I \\,uted pati ently
d1d they know what tt meant embedded 111 the leafs surface. tor the LORD: He turned to me
Shyrah, .tlong w1th a few oth- He could eat no more and soon and hea1d my Cl )' He lilted me
ers. wc1e too busy to pay any became completely listless.
out of the sluny p1t. out ol the
attent1on . So many wonderful
He watched passively when mud and mire: He set my feet
thmgs were takmg place tnside somethmg 111 s1de finally cut on a rock .mtl g.tve me a firm
themselves that they had to through his skm and emerged place to stand He put a new
begun to spm silk and were onto the lea(' beside Peger's song 111 my mouth, ,, hymn ot
wrappmg tiny threads about broken and ruined bodv. It was prmse to our God Many wlll
themselves unul they were the larva of a Trichogramma
sec and fear and put thetr trust
completel y robed in the whtte was p. Looking quite happy
st lk And, while in this incredi- and health y, it ignored Pege• in th~ LORD. Blessed is the
ble chrysalis stage, the trans- and began bus1Iy w1apping man who makes the LORD his
formation contmued.
itself m threads taken from trust. who does not look to the
Meanwhile. as the droning Pege1'sown. body until 1t had proud. to those who turn ,!Side
sound grew louder and louder, completely cocooned 1tself m to false gods Many. 0 LORD
Peger hesitated. He had seen s•lk, hummmg to itself all the my Giod. are the wonders You
have done. The thin gs You
Sh~rah completely cover her- wh 11e 1t worked
self m her cocoon of :vebbmg
Shortly 'afterwards. Peger planned tor us no one ctlll ·
As ht s eyes remamed frozen on . finall y died. He had only a recount to Yot•: wcr, I to speak
her u111!lovmg f~nn , he won- vague awareness ot what had and tell them. they wou ld be
derelt•f she had linally lost her actually happened to him and of foo many to decla.e" (Psaim ~
mmd and had ult1mately the opportunity lost now to him 40 1-5 NIV).
(Tiwm Mollollau lias miuis·
delude herself and others mto forever. The mt~ht-have-bee ns
an, early death. Antl whtle he would never be for poor Peger. tered in !·out/rem Ollio tire
hesttated, wondenng about all
A few weeks passed. A cou- past 9-112 years and i.1 the palot thts, he fatled to nouce a pie of leaves away, a cocoon tor of Pathway Community
small _ Tnchogramma wasp began to tremble and a tiny Cllurclr. He and Iris wife are
hovenn~ closer and closer opemng appeared halfway up the parents of four children.
behmd htm.
.
its length. In only about t 0 sec- He may be reached by email at
Sudde~ly, . hts back was onds, a wet and crumpled pastorthom @patlrway~:a llipo­
ablaze With pt,ercmg pam . Ht s Swallowtail butterfl y emerged lis.com ).

Pastor

'c1 \ rh..'arl\ 1uu tlllll'h lot

BY

RICK

Special services set
POI NT PLEASANT - Evangehst
John Elswick will hold services at the
old lo~ church on Sunday at the West
Yirgtma State Farm Museum grounds
near Point Pleasant. There wtll be special singillg. A carry-m dinner will be
held at noon A gospel s1 ng will beg in at
1 p.m. 15y Proclam , Aaron Grate, Ray ad
Delons Cundtff, and the Gloryland
Believers

Gospel Jubilee under way

salute to veterans antl youth m gospel
music Saturday evening, and a 15th year
celebratton
on Sunday. For more in forma·
COITAGEVlLLE - The Bend Area
Evelyn
Roush at 304-882-2049.
tion
call
Gospel Jubilee is underway at the Jackson
Country Fatrgrounds in Cottageville. W.
Weekend revival set
Ya. Servtces will continue through
Sunday. Singmg begms at 2 p.m. Over 78
LONG BOTI})M - Revival services
singmg groups are included in the Jubilee.
Admisston is free but love offerings _r ill wtl be held at 6:30 p.1_n. on Saturday and
Sunday at the Long Bottom Freedom
be taken . Refreshments are available.
A potluck dinner WJI be held Fnday Mission on County Road 3 I Clyde Fen-ell
mght, an auctiOn Saturday mornmg, a will be the preacher.

.

RULE

l::.hnmg-7 \Opm

\!'~&lt;"11'11~·

Rick
Rule

In IM fir&lt;IJ'ftlfS. you
Warmth.
smttnlUla, and the soft nen
of~int:•rms.~nonly a
\'&lt;Mtbutaway.
wnf hft lbtlf.

ThUf-'i 7 {II) pIll . P.tStm Mam K Hu thlll

PO Bm. 467 DuJJmg Lan~
W Va
l'a~t u r
Nr:ll Tr:nnam
S~.·l'\t~e' IO lXIam &lt;~rtd7pm

are go mg to come inl and

sooner or later. You may
mtss the wmds tod ay or the
next. but none of us are totally passed.by the storms The
Btble says 'j\nd as 1t is
appointed um'o men once to
die. but after thts, the Judgment··· Hebrews 9:27
The "storms of sickness,
trouble. pam. heartache a_nd
JUdgment are always terrify•ng to those who are not prepared for them. Hurricanes of
the so ul are always the most
devastating because there
catch
peo ple
usuall y
unawares However, we do
have an early warnmg system
m the Wmd of God We simp!}' need to trust Christ as our
Savmur Once you have let
Htm 11110 your lite, you will
also be able to sleep through
the storms because HE has
left nothmg for us to do!

Queen
Brazier

,.,

700 N. 2nd St.
Middleport, OH
740·992·3321
uardratl, Fence &amp;
Sign erec tion

llllcnm

Pr ~.I L h [r

Flo\d

.t

Catholic
.l 4~ - ' l~r

m ·Dati\

J

Churc-h

Sun

\L.1,~ -

4 l()

Hemlock Grmt C hn!!han

r hun:h

~lm t,tcr

.t

Larn Brt&gt;l\11 W1 &gt;r~ h 1p 'J ~!)
m SunJa ) Sdl•&gt;~.ll - I{J 10 ;,( 111, BtJ,Ic

Stud~

9'0am Wnrslnp I I ,1m anJt.pm
\lhJn~.·,da) Scf\\[1,'- 7 r Ill
Ruthmd First Bap11s1 C hurch
Sund 1\ S~.h, .... l
9 iO , .t m Wur;lup
10 4~ .1 111

Swll.l..t\ Sdl••.,.l'l

"•'!•lllp

IO ~"

Suml.1y Slhnol

9 iU am

Wnr,h 1p-- I 0 lO a m 6 p m
S~nllC~ 7 pm

~~ ..:J1ll.'.~J.n

lh,

( rnlnotl (_ lu~tu
-\~hun l "i\r.t~usct. PJ ~tnr Btl]l Ruhtrhun
'iunJ.t• S,h,ll!l - ,,_.s J 111 \\ nr'h1r 11

11\l

J.lll

I 0 1() .t m

Episcopal
l~h

Pa•hlr "'.rlmoJ

(,ran Ep1scopuJ Churl:h
I \I.un St l'tnn ~rll\ li11nJ 11 Sdllo.•l

H1 11\ Eud1an~1
w ....1hl Pt)n,-

.mJ

lllMI 1111

R.l·'

Rmland
Sun,l:n

SumJ.L~
s~r\1~1.' - 7

Strt'l.'l

\\11r•h1r--JO 00

Sund.l) \\nr;htp - 10 'iiJ .t m &amp; 7 p m
WlJn.::-..1 1\ pra\l.'r \l.'r\ ILC 7 r m

•

'rd Sundn)
Btarv.ullo"' R1dge ~ burch of Chmt
Pa~tur Bruce: TclT), Sunday St:hool 9 10
·am
WN~Illp - 10 10 a 111- (1 l() p 111
\\cJnc ~d !l\ S.::n k~~- 6 10 p m

H.trn ~t• ll\

U:~dmg Cr~.:..:k

lO a m Wursh1p - 10 \0 a m _ 1 00
pIll . Wcdncsd.ly &amp;r\' llCS - 7 rIll

II~ tml~ 11ff Rt '!'I PNor Rev o·Ddl
Mani&lt;Y- SunoL; Sch•)l. •]
~ ~~ am
\\nrsh.1p
!0\0 am
i\0 pm .
\\cdnc~d.t~ Sent~~ - 7 lU p m

pm. SunJny E\e 70tJ pm.
WcUm: ~tla y Scrvtn• - 1 10 p m

10 Jj am, Ynuth - 5 10 pm Sunda). B1blc
St11dy Wcdnesda) 7 pm

- 9l0 am, Worsh 1p - I O~'i am . 7 pm
Thursday Bthk Stud) .md Youlh - 7 p 111

V.t'l' lup

-

w~dne~dny

M11fn.1~

IOI'i am
700
S.::r. t[.:: 7 oo p m

pm.

Hra dbul") Church of C hrist

l.llm-el C lifT Frw Mclhtwhst C hun:h

Mtm s t ~r lnm Runyon W5"iR Bradbur y
Road MtdJicporl, SunJ&lt;Jy Sthool 9 30

Pastor Gle nn Rowt· Sund.tv Sl hool 9 \IJ .1 m Wor1lhtp - 1 Hl 10 1m .1m! h
p m WcdnesJttv S..:l"\ tt:c - 7 tx) p m

.t m Wor'\htp - 10 4U ,

m

7 oo

rm

Wulncsday Sen t ~.:l.'s ? 00 p m

'

Sllnr Run Baptist
1-'.htur h 1h n S\\ an~un Sunday Sthnol .
Wur~l' ~o

l l am. 700 pm
7 00 p 111

Wcdnr:&lt;~~.L t y Scr.to.:c~

EH ntn g

am

pm

0 lO

W~d ncsday Servt~.:~s · 6 30p m

Wut~ lu p-

10

Rclhle ht!m Baptist Church
lknd, Ruut c 1 ~4 , J{ ,I ~tnc, Ol-l

P.t ~tm

1).u11cl Mct:c: t S un d .t ~ S~ h ool
'ldll .1 111 Su nd.ty Worsh tp - I 0 lO d m
Wctlnc~tlt v

7 00 p m

1 hUt ~da~ Sc.n' tl C' - 7 on

Brsdrord C hurch or C hrist
Corner o l S t Rt 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd ,
Mtm ~ t e r Dnug S htuuhhn , Youth Mmtste:r

Hills Church or C hrist

E~ a ngc lt st M1k ~

Mnnr.:: Suntluy School -

10 .t m 1 6 10 p 111
Wednesday Servin:&lt;.:- 7 p m

P.tstur Ph1l tp Sturm. Sunday Slhool 9 'O
.Ill\ Worshtp Seniti.' 10 30 am_ H1hk

·7 p m

B11pli ~ l

C hurch or C hrist
1ntcrscclwn 7 ,\n d 124 W E\

\ngc l1 ~t

Dcnms S.trgcnt. Su nda y B!b lc St udy
9 l() ,\ 111 _ Worsh 1p 10 30 am a nJ 6 ' 0

lndelk'ndcnl

WJ

111 . \\or~lup

s~nl ll: ~

10

l(l ,,

I ~am.Wo r shlp
Mond.1~

s~huo.ll

p m . Wcdnc~day Btblc Study - 7 p m

Suno.J,\\

-

10
a m , Wors hip - I I a m , 6 p m ·
Wednc:Mlay Services - 7 p m

Our Suvinur Lulherun Church
W,tlnul :.~nd Hc lll ) Sh. R.tl~l\;~\m od

P. t ~ tor

7 ()() p 111,

W~dn .::~ lt ~

7

Cooh ille L nited Mclhodisl 1 1ari ~ h
l kk n Kim.:: Coo l\ die Chm lh
Sund.1v Sdlll(!l - 10
I Lt~sd. t yS~ntt'e~ -

um P u~lo r J u ml.l~ I' Bru dy
S,lt 7 00 pm Conll' lllll(lr.u y ScrHlC

Founh &amp; Mam St , Middleport. Pastor
Rev O tl berl Cra1g, Jr 1 Sunday School -

Hnurs

mu.t be aiJICd to your Ht!.. Whit'• happt'nt'Ji 1o Momr

A&lt;W

world. and you

'lftftthtft_

Mom.llfr
full circle. You ploy..! monr rolo with Uttle rcharwl. but
,.,.. ,..,. ..~uipt on C11&lt;. Toolay, ,.,.. ...._. C&lt;ftl« •IIIV· ConJir"foll.otlom ••. and

740-949-2217
S 1zes avarlable 5x10

to

10 x 20

If ye abide in Me, mrd My
words abide in yoa, ye shall

Ho~tr, tof~ pv~ US II MW pHtpecdw,. aJ JOU .p:n bKa.IN' our 1ft( UH. Goodie$ and loolnalc1ten twilh•n-lowd dwd) p.....-.d 'fUWmwn .... on
"nisht. Thank p&gt;cinml
fiult,.. ~ laurn:hN li\'til of our awn.. You be-tame our ronfidan1 and !ll.fvi.ior u

':A Home Bank for
Home People"

29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

PO. Box 663
Pomero , Oh1o 45769-0683

our "critiC". "Your room is •
plptyl" ... "Thot phoM

740-949-2210

41J9 Richland Avenue, Athens

740-594-633.1

1-H00-45 1-9806

www.kan-audiolu'

ask what.ye will, lllrd it .\ hall
be done auto you.
John 15: 7

.f.'IH n

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC '
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomemy, Ohio 45769 l'li:'.
(740) 992-3279
'-!!Y
Tol free 1-!!77-SH:I-2433

6 .uu - 8 pm

Armmpllae

:Mi[[ie's 'l(estaurant
Home!T1ade Desserts Made Oa1ly

'.

Sunda) School 9 30 am . Worsh1p 10 45 a m Sunday Evt:ntng - 6 00 p m ,
Pasmr Don Walker

home Cooked Meals &amp; Daily Specials

Open 7 days a week
740-992-7713

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8
• MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
190 N Second St

Local source for trophies ,
Ia ues t-shtrts and more

KEBLER
BUSINESS SERVICES
An

Rutland Fm Will Baptist
Salem St , Pastor Jam 1e Fonner, Su nday
St: hoo l - I 0 a m' , Eve nt ng
Wcdnc~JiJ)' S~.:rv11.:es- 7 p m

Income Tax &amp;

Fmancial Services Firm
618 E Maw Street • Pomeroy

(740) 992-7270

7 pm ,

your li ght so shine belfor.1~1
that they rriay see
works and glonfy
I1°&gt;Jt her 111 heaven."
Matthew 5:

Middleport, OH

74D-992-61 28

"Do not 'teal. Do not lie. Do not deceive one another."
Levtticus 19: II

·"

Antlqult) Baptist
;

- I.J

HtKkmgporiChurrh

Pa~ lm

9 JO .1 m •

Nazarene
Middleport C hurch nftht Nazarene
Pastor Allen M1dcap, Su nday S~ hoo l 9 30 am ,Worsh1p- 10 30 am. fi 30 p m
Wednesday Serv tces · 7 p m , Pastor

pm
Rudand Cbun:h of God
Pasto r Ron Heath, Sunday Worsh1p - 10
11m 6 p m , Wedne sday Ser.•tces 7 ,

Joppa
Pastor Bob Randolph. Worsh •p - 9 30
am

Su n~a)

St hoot • IU JO a m

pm

Sunday School and Worsh1p 10
Evemng Sen11ces- 6 30 p m

Wednei;da) Servtces- 6 30 p m

Long HoUon1
Sunday School 9 30 am, Wurshtp -'
10 30 am
Retdsvlllt
Wo rsh tp - 9 30 a m S undBy School 10 JO am F1r~ 1 Sunday of Momh - 7 00

__........... ,.
........._...
.:ftJ!)n .:fanrral Jlome

212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy

992·3785

MIIIH111

-··-;=~=-

Pomeroy

~lWJpm

SaturJ&lt;l\

Rt•ad.

Pa~l \l r Ch,uk~ K l lU ~ h l \041 67'i
Sund.t• Sdtuol 9 Ill am SunJu\

~\l' mng ~~ n1~c

Pa~tor

StC\C Kl.::d SunJ.n

i 00 pm

'~niH

7 (){)

A t h l ~ Smd~

rm

Hobson C hnst1an 1-t'llo"shtp Church
Pa stor Hemhd \\h tte. Sttndu\ S~hool ­
l l,lam SunJa,lhurrh,[ f\1~•· (t10pm

felln\lo~ h• p

\\cdn~~da~

sen ICc 7 p m

Harrison\ tile Co mmunil~ C hurch
Theron Durham. SunJa\
I) l.O

r,m _\h•dn~sJ:.~y 7 p m

7 pm

He5toralion Chr1stta n ·-~llo\o\~hip
Hnopt:r Ru.td .\!ltCih Pa(lor

IJ l(J"i

Lonntt• Coa l ~ Sund1" \\,l l, htp Ill 00

M1ddl~por1 Communi!\' Church
57'i Peat! St , M!dJicporl PaMot S.un

Anderso n S un day S~hmtl 10 a 111
Evcmng - 7 iO p m _w~ Jn c~J~y Scf\ 1 (:"~

-

JilL

7 pm

LanKS\tllt' Chnllhan ( ' hurch
Full Gos p..:l. Pa '&gt; tilf R11hcr1 Mu!&gt;sl'r
.S umla\ Slh110.•l Y 10 .tm \\,.t,lu p 10 lO

am

7 00 rm \.\t•Jn.-,J a\ Sllll•l 7 00

pm

Fa11h

Vallt~

Tabernacle C hilrth

Pentecostal

Ba1k" Run Ruad. Pu ~ h •r Rc\ Emrlldl
R1\\ 1WI1 S un duy E\e mn g 7 p m
Thursd.L}' s~n KC - 7 ]1111
Syracuse !\l~iun
I-III Rrt dgcman Sl S)r~l ii Sl'
E\Ctl Ln g

S und:t\
(J r m

Pl'ntt"Co!ital A~sl'mbl \
R.tU ilt' P 11,t ur

R)

St

~~~

Hohalk Suml&lt;11 Sdwul
E\c nmg 7 p m \\~Jni.',J.n

\\1lhnm
I0

1 111 .

Si'r\1~.:~~ -

7

pm

7rm

Presbyterian

Hlllzcl Communtl) CliurTh

0 11 R! 12.1 P.ISIOJ EJ stl Halt SunJ I)
Sd!ttol 9 l() a.tn . Wor~ htp - 10 IU .1111
7 30 Jllll
llle Commumly C hur('h
Snnllat S( hnol - lJ lll !I 111 , Wmshtp 0)t:S\

First Unilt·d l1n:sl!\terhm
Pastor Rotlcrt C'!!l\\ \\o• lshtp 11 .t m
s, lllt; USf'

llarr1sonvtlle !ln.'s In h·ruu1 ( hu rt:h
P.tslor Ruhcn Cn'"'- Wm~lup - 9 1111

10~0am .7 pm

"liddl~porll're~ lnwriun

s~.: hno l

- Ill u :n

II

Wnrsh1 p -

Wursh tp

Ill 45

\\'cd n~,: sd&lt;~ y

a Ill

W• 'f'~ll[l

11.11\l

Seventh-Day Adventist
t SeH•nth-Du\ Ad,•r nust
Mult&gt;o:rry llh l&lt; d l'•lllll.'f•l~ l'.t,tnr

am. Wl.'dnesd:Jy Scf\'!l\' 7 p m

lO

a

111

7 lO p m

7 l(l pIll

Sunduv Sdwu l
q ~0 .1 m b umtg.- tt 10 p 1n . Wednad.t\
Scr\ t ~e - 7 p m
t "ull Gospel Lijlhthouse
~1045 Ht land Road Pomeroy PaslOr Ro}
H11!1ter. Stmda~ School - 10 am, Evenmg
7 ~0 p m Tue~ d n) &amp; Thursday - 7 10

lknn.·u Lu~ k tcsh S,Hurda\ S"n1~cs
S.tl.lh.tth Sl hiHll - ~ p 111 \~nr•hl p- l rIll

United Brethren
MI. Ht&gt;rmun L mlt•d nn'lhrt'n

C hnsl Chun h
1h41 1 WKkhml Kd
P.1s1o1 Pctrr ManmtiJk S unJa1 Sdwul 111

rcx.t~ Com m un lt ~

p m.

[I

m

Worshtp
111 111 11m 7 oO
Sl r1 llt: S - 7 00 p 111

W~.:dn ~sJa y

Yo uth group meetmg 2nd &amp; ~lh Sunda\ s

7pm
Eden Umted Brtthrtn in C hrist

pm

Church of the Nazarene, Pastor Jam1e

Sli ver Rtdge Pastor Lmdn Damev..ood,
S11ndny School - 9 am, Worsh1p Sel"\ 1ce
JO am 2nd and 4th Sunday

Penn. Sunday School 9.30 a m , Worsb•p
- 10 45 11m, 7 p m , Wednesday Servtces

Carleton Interdenominational Chun:h

Rtednllle Ftllowshlp

Servtces - 7 p m

Ru ~.se ll

7 pm

South Btlhel Community Church

Allen M1dcap

Worshi p-I t am,630p m

Satterfteld1 Sunday School - 9 4S am ,
E\enmg- 6 p J11, Wednesday Ser.tres- 7

&amp;

n1 \h,l Cnlumhf(l \\ \a nm Ll&lt;; m g

9 '0

Rc\

Nonheast C lu ster A lfred. Pasto r Jane
Bea111e Sunday Sc hool - 9 JO a m ,

~:;l_(

1\11. Oln c (onmmnil) Church

Cu Rd 63. sUnda~ Sdwol
Woo;h1p- 10 '0 a Ill

r rr~

of the ll\ln~ Sa\lo r
Anttqutl\ P.t,lur J~,sc Morns

s~f\KC~

~~~~

m

o.1

Pa~tur La.,.,rcn~c Bu ~l1

Iorch L:hun:h

MI. Ohvt' United Methodist

7

Slhoul - IJ 'O am. Wor.:;htp lJ ~ 0 .t 111
and 7 p m W~dnc,ila~ - 7 p m Fnda\ -

Wnl n ~stl uy

Chester
Pastor Jane Bell.t tte, W1mh1p - 9 am ,
Su nday Sc hool
10 am , Thursday

am

•~c

10

Failh Gosptl Chun:h
Long IJ.ll:tum Su nd.l) Sdmo l - ll

Ill ,t 111

Gnmtl Strl.'.:: l Su nday SdHl(l] Y ~0 am,
Worshl p- IO JO,Im p~ , lo r Phtlll p B~I I

Meigs Cooperative Pari!lh

Syracuse Hrst Church of God
Apple anJ Seco;1d Sts. Pastor: Rev Oav1d

~n\t~&lt;:

10 .1m . W:cdnl.'sduy

C.rah11m Umted Mellwxhst
Wor ~h 1p - 9 JO .1 m (hi &amp; 2nU S un ),.

Oavls.Qulckel Agency Inc. If ye abide ill Me, a11d My Brogan-Warner
Full hne of
' INSURANCE
Insurance words abide in you, ye shall
SERVICES
Products+ ask what ye will, and (t shall
F1nanc1al
214 E. Main
be do11e uuto you.
Serv1ces
AGENCIES Inc
992·5130
Joh11 15:7
Bill

Wcdnc!&gt;da\ sen

SunJ.q
S ~,: h uo l

United Methodist
p 111 ( ' 111 &amp; 4 th Sun)
Sc rv l l~- 7 30 r m

\\ l'd th.•, Ja~

Pflstnr l.tml.'s Sn)dtr

a m, Wor~ lup

10.30 a. m. 1 00 p m , Wednesday
Servt~s - 7 00 p m

Mt. Moriah Chun:h ot God
Mtl e Htll Rd , Racme, Pastor , James

Mt. Mo,rlwh Bapllsl

Sun d a~

.. 10 .!Ill
Wedne,d.w S..:n l l ~

Bethel C hurch
Tuwthlu p Kd 461K SunJ tl)'

~0

Kt

B.1~k

~ ll dd kpwt. Pa ~ tor Tc1~ ~ a

S Thtrd St .

Ral lne
Pete Sha ll cr Sunda} Sd11\o.1l - Ill

Sc n· t~ c~-

a m &amp; 7 pm
,,,wh 7 r m

\\'eUni.'~Ja,

7 pm

l'vl.un &amp; Ftlt h St

L1re \Ilion C..:enter

l77.; G.·urg··~ Cn.•d Ru,td. Gal hpoh ~. OH
P.htnr llill S!.l!cn SunJ I} Sen l t ~S - ll!

Full t.O!iptl C hurch

Abundant Grat-e N •

s~ hoo l

am Wnrsh1p-Y.1m
7pm

,\\.;J n~ 'i..la\ s~·n tu.· - 7

rm

6 30

Pi!~lo r

lllUnlh , C\~IUil):! SC f \' lle

rm

7

\\-ur,htp
prn

Fuhh t"ull Gospel C hurch

lOam

Comer S)l.tnmrc &amp; S.::umd Sl . t•om~:roy
Sund.!) School - IJ .l'i am. \\'m~lup - II

Hartrord C hurch ot C hrist in '
Chrtslian Union
Hartford. W Va .. Pa stor Oav1d Greer.
Sunday School - 9 30 am , Worshtp -

Church of God

S unda\

Full Gtls pt'l Chur~h Pa~ tnr s Jnhn &amp;
P,tll~ Wade 601 St....:•mJ ,.\\c 1\la,nn 77l -

Lung Bouom

S now ville
- 10 ll lll \V(Ir(hlp . 9 'I m

Wnrshtp - f I ,, m

7pm

Cliflon TalK'rnadt C hu rch
( l11lnn W \ a SunJ t\ S,dlfl&lt; !l - 10 a m

N~"

Morse C hapt!l Church

Ralpll Sp1rcs, Su11day Sdwol 9 30 a m.
Wo rsh1p - 10 30 am_ 7 p m Thur ~dny
Sen ~~~ s - 7 p 111

Anus Hurt, Sunday School- 10

..

7 30pm

rm

O rf 124 hchmtl Wtlkt•w tl k.

Fa1th Baptist Church
Rat lroad SL, t.'lason, Sund~y S~.: hool

.•

,\gape l.&amp;fe Cenlt'r

7 00 pm

Stud) Wl.'tl 7 00 p m

t ill

Pa ~tor

Fltrl.'ma n
1'.1 ~11.1 r
E 1n c rnu ~
L;.1~r&lt;"JK• l •1rcmtn \\ (lr•htp l ll lflam

\\orJn.::"la\

Pa.,ltlf Juhn Gtlnwrc Sunda) Sc hofll
9 1() .1111 WUJ slu p - 10 ~&gt;:; am
Bthlc

BmJ)

Christian Union

7 pm

7 tKI

YISam

Ca rmt'l -Sutton
Carmel &amp; Ba~lmn RU~ Raunc Oh1u

P.1 ~1or

Sc!'\l~t:

m

7 pm

r m )\lUth S&lt;!n 1 ~ c

Dt\1 ~

Ut thanv

St. J o hn Lutht'ran Churt:h

p m

Sal~ m Communu~ C hu rch

PaStor John G t lnwr~ Sund~y St h•tOI 10
a m • \\hr~ h t p - Y ~ m • WeJne~Jay
Sl.'f\Ke~

St

6 \{J

&lt;l21

Sa lem Center
\\ltlh,un K M.trsll.tll

Suntl.n

~~h

S1ud~-

Ash Stl"t'cl Chun:h
\ltJdlcpon - '',t,hJr

m . Thtlll..O:t}

7p m

Slht.IOl IO
B1hk StuJv

~()

\.like

5017 S..:r\11.:1.' 111111.' Sundav lOJOam.
Wr:dn.. ,d.l\ 7 pm

Rutla nd
P,l~t•lT H:t1.k 1:5o urn. Suntl,ly S~httol

Wcd n ~Stl.w

7

,, 111 _ i

Rtjotcing Lirt&gt; C hurch
~ nJ .\1c
\ltddlcp.t rl

~

'0tl

Slhuol 9 •o a m \1ornmg \\11r~htp
10 1.11 .1m &amp; ft i(l pm W.:dnt',da\ S&lt;' n K~

Roc k Spnngs
Paqllf Kl'llh Rad..:r. Sunda~ Schwl 9 I~
a 111
\\M,htp ' - IU a 111
'niHil

Lutheran

W V,1 Pastot D.tl 1J Ru ssell Sund.ty
Sd!ut,l 10 00 .1 111', Worshtp - I I .t m

Sll\11'1: 7 ll) J1 Ill

to 00 r 111. \\..:Jne ~!.J;J\ flt)C) r

Paq or R11h H:.trhl.'r.
Kar.::n [)1\t, SunJ\\

anJ B1l&gt;lc

Sl. Patul Luthera n Umn-h

- !O~Oam

am, Worship- llllm

.

9 \!j

1.'\l: l \

Study, Wednesday. 6 30 p m

Forni Run Baptl1l

'

Wu r~ h !p

15 .t m

H om~mnkmg mt'\'ttng. J ~t Thur'

Ptnc Grove. Wurshtf) 4 ()U .t m Su;Lda\
SLI!&lt;&gt;t&gt; l - 10 00 ,1 m P,1s\tl f J.11nc ~ P

Ill Jll

\\ ~Jn"..Ja\

' (hurl'h
P,l,l tlf \\ 11ne R kv.dl SttnJ.I~

\~ ~~r~htp

\0 J m

\\ '"'lnc~•l·l' 'i~n ~~ ... ,

Sl houl
l."t'tanl f'a,tnr

Pnmf'm\

9 am, Wmsh1p

.

~

Chc~to.'r

Pra~e r

Ill am

14 ~ J ll ~ l

Victory

Putor

PeJ!. Ch~pd
Stmdll) Sd11\o.1l - '} a m 'Ah hhlp

IJ

Re'

a 111

Stt\trS \Iilt' lommun1h r\postnhl•

Worshtp J() 1111 bcmng \\or~h lp 6 pm
'loulh gn~ttp 6 pm \\l.',!n[,Ju~ p.,\hf 111

Easl Lel.arl

p m ,W~-dnc sday Sc rvt~.:cs ·1 U0 p hl

N 2nd S1 Mtddlcpnn P.tstur Jam.::s
E Keesee. Wor~htp - l Oam 1 7 p m ,

.....

Y

SunJa' Sc hf1ol

P.L SI\Ir Btl! Ma rsh .t ll Sun~ay s~ h nul 9,t Ill Wnr&gt;htp - 10 a m h i Sunday

S~~

Michael L. Crites
Director of Family &amp;
Community Services
Overbrook
Reha,bilitatton Ctr.
"A Celebration of Life"

J{ ot&gt;m~t n

J&gt;t, ll)f lln]l

P:~~tor

\\ u r,htp

\\ .:dn~.•-dJ\' St-nll•'~

Soclely/Pnc sthnod
J 1 0'1- 1~ 110 noon
Sac rament Scnt~c 11-1 0 l 'i 1 m_

7 pm

Rd

Bt'thd \\o rsh 1p Centrr

\lillt~\tlle

St Rt 160. -146 6~ 17 or 44$) 74Sfl.
Sunday Sdmol 10 20-1 1 ,J m Rtllcl

B1ll Amb..:rgcr. Sunday Sc hool - 9 30 am,
Worshtp - KDU a m , 10 ]0 a m 700

Dexter C hurch of C hri sl
S unduy sdmpl 1l lO .t 111., Sunday ""r~l up

ll l1 Rt 7 Pa~ tur Rev
J .lln~.: s I{ Aln.:c. Sr. Su nday Umf1~d
Sn\ 1~.: c \\-orsh1p
I 0 ~() u Ill _ fl p m
St Rl

hrt&lt;Otum J i' llu " ~htp
,htp t
o\k etmg m lht· old Am~.:n~an L ~J!Ilin Hall
S•1uth ltlurth A\[nu.·, \hJJiq"-•rt
P,"h -.r Chn' Sll' n u1 Ill !10 ,uh S unJ t\
01her nLO:l'!llll!' 111 h•'mc~

(o lO am

Star
Pa ~tur Juhn Otlmurc Sunduy S.. huol - II
.1 m Wur~htp I 0 a 1l1

The C hurch of Jesus
Chn sl or La tter-011 ~ Sa inls

Co

Blo.~tlo.'&gt;'-utxl Sunda' s~h"''l - Y IU

1\tornin~

a m . Rut&gt; J, Wt:rrv

, Htedsville Church of Chn'll

Old !\ethel h ('(' Will Baptist C hurch
2!1601 St i{t 7, M1Jd k por1 Sun d &lt;~}'

m. E\'onmg

Latter-Day Saints

Cllnnnumon - I 0 10
Mmt stcr

B1hil' Study 6 00 p m

Sdwnf - 10 ,,

am

Rutlund C hurch of C hrist
S unday School - 9 .. 30 a m , Wnr~htp and

Hi(kor~
(, r~.tt

1{)

tahan Utble thurrh

I Non-d~n·munalt•&gt;n.tl 1dl••~\

Sllnda\ Slho•tl

S~hn•)l

111

Pt &gt; m~rm Ptk l.'

Tuppl'r' Pla1n ~ Sun Wnr,htp 10 .tm &amp;
tt l(J pnt Thm.J t ~ Bthk SluJ, 7 011 p m

a m and 7

am

1 rtd.J\ 7 r

Commumh uft:hnst
p,,rtland Kaunl.' KJ l'.t,tur lt m Prttllln

Pla1n C hurch o r Chml

am

I.011m

10

6th alld Pa lmer St

Sunda) S\:hool - '-) 1S

RaciiK' First Baphsl
Rt~k Rule. Sund.ty S~ h tl(ll- 9 10

P:.~stur

- Ill

s, huul -

He.Mth ti\flddll'port J
l'·hhtr Hrt an Ounh.uu Sundt\
I.J• 111am \\\Jr,hlp - 11 Oil am

- 1 0.1~

Flrsl Bnptisl Church
M trk

..

P.l~tor

, Wl&gt;sll'}Mll Blblt' Holmess Umn·h

7C. Pc:.~rl Sl . M1ddlcpun Pa slor Rt~.:k
Bounu: Sunday Sd11._10l - 10 &lt;1 m Wohhlp

.,unJ.t• S,h•~•l '' \[) .1111 \\ nr, htp 7 00
pm ""Jnc.....JJ.\ BtJ,Il'SIUJ~ 7tXIpm
huth l-t'liO"Shtp Lrusude for Christ
PJ.'I"r Rc\ hJnkl1n Dttkt•tt ' S~.:nttc

Oa'il~ ~

Stlto~&gt;l

Fcltuv.,htp Sunda}- 6 rIll

H y.wll Run Communih Church
Pastor R..:\ Ltrry Leml.::y Sunday Schnn\

~ l uJJ!I.' p on_

B1ttk

Pi ne Gro'e Dible Hol inf'!i'i Chun:h

lnstrumcnt,tl . Worship S..:rv Jcc 9 a m
Co mmun 1o n - Ill a 111 , Sunday Sl.:hool

Thp~rs

am

•·ort&gt;SI Run
f'a,to r Bnh J{ohm,ot'l &lt;;;ull&lt;.lt\

Zton C hu rch of C hr1 st
Pumcm\ H.tmsonvll ll' Rd (R l ! 4J )
P.1~1nr Rt)gc r Walsnn, Sund,ty S~ h 01,1 l -

~0

Rd _ Rutland Pa stur Rc•

t:k"c \ Ktng SunJ~} ...,;h•&gt;ol ~ ~ am
Sund.:t'
&gt;AurshtJI -7 p m . \\,'t.lncsd,l\
pray.r 1111.'('!111~ 7 rIll

SunoJ,n Slh•'•'l - 4 \o J m \\or~htr
It! ll! J m
h 111 pm
\\n!n~·Ja\
~n~K&lt;-"' 7 !'Ill

Other Ch,urches

11 .1m

P :.~sltt r Brt Jn Dunh :.~ m
tl m Sunlla1 S,htH"il- II )

Host of S haron llolillt'ss Chu rch

~~in 1e" Btbk t hun'h
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Worsh1p - Y 10 a m _ SunJa) Sc hool

lloiW Haptis l Chu n.h tSoulhtml
f,.hJdkp'n SunJa, M:hool

W..:dn e~tlay Scr\l~.:es-

(740) 992-64 72
Fax i740l 992·7406

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5th .md Mam Pa stor AI Hurt~m Youlh
Muustcr J o~ h Ulm Sur~o.l,t~ S~ h ool 9 lO

'i70 Gr.llll St

\Nednc~d.ty Scn' l~cs

Sireel
Middleport OH

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f:hurch of Christ

Slu1h 7 00 pm

I.'ICnmg 6 JO pm Wedn..:~d.l\ 6 IOpm

Pomcrn\ 1'1rs1

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Poml'ru)

PNnr Stc\C Lmle Sunilitv Sthool 9 JO
:un Murmng WuNh1p ](} 10 am SunJ&lt;11

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Happy Moth&lt;r'o ~!

i\1."'\0'

Sunda\

llills idt Bwpt1st C hun:h

209 Thl .... ' C&gt;•
Raclne,OH

Dairq

queen of our world . A kW
trued t ht pam of~ skinned
bft Of' hurt feelinp.
Shotltn wu )'®r arm.
Dwtnsrh&lt; ,... y..,.,
your qllftflly crown tilt&lt;d

'*&lt;Dill&lt;

w~.uncMkll B1ttlc

7 OHpm

(Meigs Couuty ministers:
You are invited to submit sermonettes of an impirational
nature, 500 to 700 words,jor
tllis Friday page. They
should be typed and delivered, or e-mailed to lloejlicll @mydailysentiuel.com.
All are subject to editiug and
should uot deal witll contro·
versial iS!'ues or specific
church doctrine. We want
your contributions.)

Warm Frlt'l11il\

perfection pmonJII&lt;d ••. thc

nobc.1 l!unili... Apin wo .,.,. Nba In •

pm

21 ~ W

Carpent er Blllph~tChurch
Suml.t) St:ho~.tl
9 lOam. Pr!!a~hmg
Scr\t~l.'
HJ \llarn
1:: \l.'llfng
S.:n1~r:

Sunday Times-Sentinel

1-740-667-3 156 '
"Still small enouglr to care"

Pa~ll•r

Baptist

Celebrating special·
dqs with you!

',c

Ch.1pman "iund:n s~hno.'l
10 am.
\\o:&gt;rshtp II .1m \\ edn~.,Ju~ Scr' ~~e'

Assembly of God

P:~stor . Da\!d W1~..: man Sun d :~y School

Coolville, Oh10
Lo~.:ated IC'ss than 30 mtnutes !rom
At he n ~. Pomewy 0 1 ParkcntbUig

\1ornmg v.or&lt;ihlp II am [q:mng- 7 pm
Wedne'&gt;da) 7 p m

l' mnumuel Apostolit: Tai.H.'madt Inc.

was then that the farmer
understood why the h1red
hand could "sleep .while' the
wmd blew.''
Is there a ga le beginmng to
blow m your life today? Are
there . dark clouds on · your
honzon ., Even 1f you do not
see them. we know that they

Ch~tf'r Church or the \uo~~rt&gt;nt'

0 J \\ htlt' Rll oil St Rt

State Reule 124, Reeds\llle: Sunday
Sc hool- II 11m , Sunda) Worsh1p - JO 00
am, &amp; 7 00 p m. Wedne sday Services ·
7 00 p m • \\edne§day Youth Sen tc.: -

7 OO pm

Ktngsbury Road Pastor . Robert Vance.
Sunday Schoo l - 9 30 a m , Wor.;htp

1 pm

9 JOn m , Worship · 104.5 am

Ao"" t.ccam. JOO"'I
chiidJ't'n, you V.WI

W&lt; b&lt;pn jobs and

~~ d

l nttp RJ 11!1 Nl'\1 LunJ Rtl RullanJ
s~n IlL' Sun I!) 00 u ll\ &amp; 7 3H p m'

The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community

Pomeroy, OH
740-992.-6215

~

\hJdh!port Knm Kon~k PJ~h '!
SunJa•. Jl) ~n .1111
\\~.·Jn~-.d.t•
7\J t
pm YuUihPn 7 \Opm

'

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26 vears in local business
Roofing &amp; Building Work

\\l'f"hlp Co:nl~·r

Mt Union Baptist

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER

•

Church of God or Prophen
J~) Pa-tur P J

Ra\en ~.,.,ood.

5acml llnrt (alhohc Church
161 \1u lhcrn '\\t: . Po mero~ 99~ 58YK
P;,~,l nr R~\ \\alter 1::. 1/.::mt Sat lon

H.n t&gt; r \alit"~

'

Young's Carpenter Service

Second Baptlsl Chun:h
WV. Sunday School 10 am

Ch urch of JtSus Christ Apostoht
VanZandl ,mJ \\ ..trJ RJ Pas1or James
\1tlkr SunJJ) S~ho.tl
10 ~0 am

q 4'\

Church Briefs

A7

- The ·o-anysentinel• Page

WORSH IP GOD -THIS WEEK

F£1lowshio
Apostolfc

PASTOR RACINE BAPTIST CHURCH

Yc.1rs a~o. u tanner who
owncd.Jand alon~ the Ailanuc:
sc,tcoast was - desperately
atlverttsmg for h1red hands.
Most people were reluctant to
wnrk im sud1 farms because
they' fe,trecl the awful storms
\\ hid1 blew in. ~&gt;reakmg havoc
on bUJI'dings .md ClOps .tlike.
The f.trmer intervtewed
m.my .tppl rcants for the JOb.
hut found no one wJIImg to
work IOJ lmn Fm.tlly. a short.
thm man . we ll p.tst m1ddle
age. approached the farmer
"'Are you a good tarm hand r'
the tanner asked him "Well.
I can sleep when the wmd
blows:· answered the lntle
man. Althoug h thi s answer
puzzled the Iarmer. he was
desperate for help and quickly hired 1he 111.111.
The little man was busy
from d.twn to dusk. and the
f,tnnet was very happy with
the man· s work Then one
mgh t the wJ nd began to howl
as a storm began to blow in
IJO m otl shOJe.· The tanne1
rushed next door and shook
the llltle man aw.,ke
He
shouted. "Get up 1 A storm IS
commg! Tte thtngs down
bcfiurc they blow away!"'The
little man rol led over 111 bed
.md satd ftrmly. "No sir. I told
you. I can sleep when the
wind blows."
The far mer was tempted to
fire him 0 11 the spot , but
mste,td he hUJ ried outSJde to
p•ep;ue for the storm He
f11 st went to the hdystacks .
but they had already been
cove red With tarpaulins.
Next. he ran to the barn s, but
found that all the cattle were
alieady safely tnstde. As he
contmued to rush around the
f.tnn. he fou nd that all the
doors and the shutters on all
the huitdings were t• ghtl y
secUJed Everythin g was tied
dov. n. Nothmg cou ld blow
away There was nothing left
to do' T he lmle man had
take n care of everythmg. It

c:(t ·.

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www.mydallysentlnel,com

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AN EARLY WARNING SYSTEM

body curletl ur .ullJ nearly fdl
trom the leal h~ had fU't tx·ctt
c.tttng but he m.uia~cd t&lt;&gt;
rcg,un ht&gt; hold .JU't Ill tunc
"Ouc:h'" he c:u: l;umcd. l&lt;"&gt;i..Jnc
arountl wihJiy.
•
As hi s eye' 'lll vcyc·d the

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Friday, May 13, 2005

A Hunger For More
Shyrah was a Swallowtdil
caterpillar not quite hke all the
others She had been h.1tched
first of all her I00 brothers .md
sisters and had been the first
one to try anythtng ·new e\er
since. Fun-lovmg ,md social.
she lived life on the wi ld stde.
She would chmb up 'the htghest. in spite of the ever-presem
danger of predatory btrds She
would JOUrney out into the
back yard the farthest. no matter that It mtght be Friday and
the lawn was always rnown on
Fndays And she would always
eat the most, no matter that her
appet1te, vorac1ous even for a
caterpillar, was carrying her far
and ,away beyond what others
fe lt was safe and comfortable
One day, howevet. she begaH
to feel strange. A JOYand thnll
were so powerfull y bubblmg
up from w1thm her that she
bega~1 to "ng hearty and 1oM
notes w1th he" tmy caterpdl,u
vmce. Oh. and such thou ghh
were takin g shape m her nund 1
She began to dream ot ll y111g,
longmg to t a~e w111g .mtl be
lifted up over the qrth antl soar
in the grand and glorious sapphire sky!
·
And so her songs tlomed on
to the other caterpillars. Some
who listened found 111 themselves a simtlar stimng and a
tiny gleam of hope for something more was awakened
Within them. Others, though.
heard her songs and wer~
angered. They were at first
annoyed with Shyrah for th ey
thought her too preoccupied
w1th her flighty fantaSJes to
stay focused on what they felt
was her supreme duty tllat of
carefully and conststently eatmg and dtgesting. Then, 111
thetr pnde, they became jealous of how others were
touched by her melody of hope
and her dreams of 1:\cing lifted
out of the mud and mtre of
only the "here-and-now."
But she still sang, undaunted
by thetr looks and their words,
undeterred from the great longing in her heart. Peger, one of
Shyrah's brothers, heard her
sweet refrain and found 111 htmselt a yearnmg also to fl y and

Frlday; May 13, 2005

or

Syracuse Church 1he Nazarene
Pastor Mtke Adluns 1Sunday School - 9 30
am . Worship
1030 am. 6 p m
Wednesday Serv t&lt;:es- 7 p m
Pomeroy Church ortht Nazarene
Pastor Jan La\'endcr, Sunday School
9 30 am, Worship - 10 30 am and 6
p.m. Wednesday Servtces 7 p m

Serv tce 10 30 a m . EH nt ng Serv1ce 6

Plll
Fretdom GO!ipel Mission
Bald Knob on Co Rd J I Pastor. Re\
Roger Wtlltord Sunday School - 9 10 a m
Wors-hip- 7 p nt
' Whit~ 's Chapel W~sltyan
Coolvtlle Road Pastor

ROCKSPRINGS
Let your l1ght so shine before
REHABILITIION CENTER men, rhat they may see your
The cdre you deserve, close lo home good works and glorify your
· 36759 Rocksprings Rd .
Father m heaven. "
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Matthew 5: / 6
740.992-6606

740-992-2644

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992·2955
Pomeroy

2race is
for thee: for mY
stren2th is made
Perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

White Funeral Home
Blessed are the pure "So I stnve always to keep
u1I1
·
b f
ANDERSON
Since 1858
in heart; for they , my con~c tence c 1ear e ore
FUNERAL HOME
9 Fifth Street
174 ~:;":t~:;:;;.~zs~~ 270
shall see God.
God and man.'"
Coolville, Ohio
J.-ILAnde,..,Li&lt;mledFuntralllin&lt;tor
Acts 24·· 1
Htidl
s._r.........,.r....n.tl'loomi.. I
Matthew
5.
740-667-3110

or God so loved the world
he gave his only
50/l .. .

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John 3:16

•nouflrt'jj

~trt &amp; &amp;alrtp

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..... __ ..,___

Me1gs County's Oldest Flonsl
East Ma1n
Pomeroy, Oh
~ll!t u~ ~1Htd lj()IJt lhnughtt wllh t~lal ea111•

74D-992..fl298

Office Service &amp; Supply
137·C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992·6376

*=~~~L-----~~~--~.J~...............J.....;-~--;:·;;
.............;~~;......J
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Page AS

REGIONAL

The Daily Sentinel

'

Tri-County Roundup, Page B3
TVC track results, Page B8

Friday, May 13, 2005

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

MEIGS
COUNTY COURT NEWS
.
.

'

POMEROY
Meigs
Coumv Court Judge Steven
L. Story recently proc:essed
·the following cases:
David S Allen. Albany.
$30 and costs. seat belt violation: Thomas E. Allen.
Racine. SJO ami costs, speeding: April D. Baker. RaCine.
$20 and costs. failed to yield ;
Amanda J. Ball. Langwille,
$100, probation. disorde'dy
condu_ct: Gregory D. Ball.
Langsville, $100 and costs.
. J?robation, disorderly con duct: Jimmy L. Buchanan.
Pomeroy, $70, lighted light&gt;
required:
Bradley
E.
Burchfiel(,l. At hens. $30.
speeding: Paula A. Clark.
Pomeroy. $50 and costs, 45
days in jai l. suspended, pro• bation. passing bad checks,
$50 and costs. 45 days in jail.
suspended. probation. pass-

'

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$100 and costs, probation.
drug abuse, $150. 30 days in
jail. suspended, probation ,
driving under susp/revoc.
east turning from the south a&gt;
Friday, May 13
D.
Reitmire,
Atishia
Moming
(7
a.m.-Noon)
the evening progresses.
Pomeroy, $30 and costs,
It should be a cloud'y mornOvernight (1-6 a.m.)
speeding, $JO and costs,
speeding ;
David
M. ing. The low for today of 54 . It will continue to be
Robinson. Rutland, $52 and will occur early this morning cloudy. Light rain is expected .
costs, speeding; . Eric N. as temperatures rise to 73 by The rainfall is expected to
Saylor, Albany, $150, proba- 10 a.nr. The temperature will begin near I a.m. The rain fall
tion, reckless operation , $50, then drop back down to 72 should reach 0.08 inches by
prol;lation. failure to control ; .Jute this morning. Winds will this overnight. Temptratures
Carina
.M .
Sirac usa, be 10 MPH from .the east will linger at 67 . Winds will
Sagainore Hills, $30 and turn ing from the southeast as be 5 to .15 MPH from the
southwest.
costs, speedi ng; Jeffrey R. the morning progresses.
Afternoon
(
1·6
p.m.)
·Saturday, May 14
Smith, Long Bottom. $30 and
Expect
a
couple
of
raindrops
Morning
(7-a.m.-Noon)
costs. seat belt violation;
Lym'lett R. White, Long around the area. Temperatures ·Expect a cloudy morning .
Bottom. $30 and costs, will hold steady around 76 Expect nothing more than a
speedi'ng ; Paul E. Wilson, with today's higli of 77 occur- passing shower. Temperatures
Shade. $20 and costs, failure ring around 5 p.m. Skies will will increase from 66 to 77 by
to transfer ownership; Reid range from panty cloudy to late this morning. Winds will
A. Young, Racine, $20 and cloudy with I0 MPH winds be I0 to 15 MPH from the
from tfle southeast.
southwest.
costs. failed to yield.
Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
Afterrioon (1~ 6 p.m.)
It will be a cloudy evening.
It should remain cloudy.
·Some. raindrops are in the Expect light rain. The rai n
forecast , Expect accumula- shout(\ reach 0.06 inches by
tions of 0.03
inches. the end of this afternoon .
Temperatures will drop from · Temperatures will rise from 76
75 early this evening to 64 hy early this afternoon to 79, by 4
BY LAWRENCE MESSINA
David W&lt;mler wus not avail- I0 p.m. then climb back up to p.m. then drop down to 75 late
ASSOCIATED PRESS WR ITER
able for .comment Thursday. 66late evening. Winds will be afternoon. Winds will be 10 to
Luigino's laws uit was tiled in 5 to 15 MPH from the south- 15 MPH from the southwest.
CHARLESTON, W.Va. Monongalia County Circuit
A $36 million deal te build a Court late last month, and
frozen
food
plant
in alleges breach of contract, neg· ·
Parkersburg and employ up ligent and fraudulent omisto 600 people fell apart sions and professional negliKroger~ 16.10
'-- 45.31
because the 'plant's proposed gence among its causes of ACt
Ud.-20.21
AEP-35.05
water supply is possibfy con- action. It alleges it spent $2.5 Akzo- 40.47
NSC -30.77
taminated by a chemical used million before backing out of. Ashland Inc, - 88
Oak Hill Financial - 29.39
OVB - 27.75
to make Teflon, · u lawsuit the agreement, and seeks addi- ATAT-18.67
Blt
-11.24
BBT
-39.35
contends.
tional damages as well.
Bob
Evans
21.43
Peoples
- 26.70
Luigino's Inc. has sued the
The class-action targeting BorgWarner - 49.04
Pepsico - 56.68
West Virginia Economic C8, filed in 2001. blamed Champion - 3.85
Premier- 10.25
Development Authority over DuPont 'for the possible conta- Charming Shops - 7, 78
Rockwell- 47.72
the scuttled 2002 agreement mination. C8 is a key ingredi- City Holding - 31.34
Rocky Boots - 29.81
RD Shell - 57.25
that would have landed a ent in Tetlon, and DuPont pro- Cot -46.75
SBC-23.25
180,000 square foot r.rocessi ng duces the nonstick coating ·at DG-20.86
Wa~Mart- 47.85
DuPont
46.57
and distribution factlity &amp;t the its Washington Works plant.
Federal Mogul - .49
Wendy's- 43.49
Parkersburg Business Park. ·
Without admitting any lia- USB- 28.34
Worthington ..:.. 15.70
Minnestota-based bility, DuP&lt;iml agreed to settle Gannett - 7 5.99
· The
Dally stock reports a;&amp; the 4 p.m.
frozen food maker contends the class-action in Septe(llber. General Electric - 35,87
closing quotes of the previous
day's·transacttons, provided by
the agency breached the Appruved by a judge . in GKNLY- 4.55
Davidson
4
7
Harley
Smith
Partners at Advest Inc. of
ag ree ment by failing to reveal February. the agreement has
JPM- 34.83
Gallipolis.
that a class-action lawsuit had DuPont providing $ 10 mil-raised warnings over the pres- lion in new treatment equip'
ence of · pertluorooctanoic men! to six local water utili,
acid, known as PFOA or C8, ties and funding a $5 million
in the local water supply.
independent study on C8 's
C8 causes cancer in labora- effect on people. DuPont
tory animals and lingers in could spend another $235
the environment. Inten sive . million ·on a program to mongovernment and industry itor the health of residents
studies are under wav to exposed to the chemical.
determine
if
exposure
Last month, DuPont agreed
inc reases human cancers, to resolve a complaint by the
Wonderful opportunities are available in Tom Peden
reproductive problems or U.S. ·
Environmental
Country. We are expanding our stall and need more
other health disorders.
Protection Agency alleging ·
salesmen and saleswomen. No Experience is required ,
After discovering the alle- · the company failed to disclose
only a willingness to learn, work as a team and have a
gations on its own, the "stig- health data about C&amp;. Some of
ma of significant contamina- the EPA charges focused on
strong initiative.
tion'' forced Luigino's to can- ·the company's handling of a
cel its plans, the lawsuit said. finding in 1981 that the chem• Potential Income 40-60k
• 401 K Retirement Plan
· "Luigino's would have ical had jumped from the
• Work At The 11 Dealership • Health Insurance
been using hundreds of thou- blood of a pregnant female
sands of gallons of potential-. employee to her unborn child.
. Call To Schedule An Interview:·
ly co ntaminated water eac h
When it nixed . its agreeday for the production of ment with the WVEDA' in
Tom Peden Coun,try
frozen food ," the lawsuit March 2003, Luigi no's said it
•
1-800-822.()417 • 372·2844
said . "Given the contamina- "has sufficient capa;:ity while
475
South
Church Street • Ripley, WV.25271
tion and litigation associated this project remains on hold
with the·area, distribu.tors and to meet its current and anticiretailers would have been pated production . needs." It
justified in refusing to carry later reponed flat sales for
Ll!igino 's food products."
2002, after several years of
WVEDA Executive Director strong growth.

ing baLl checks . $50 and co,h. 10 days in jail. suscost' . 45 days in jail, sus- pended. probation. no driver
pended. probation . pa"in g license.
baLl checks. $50 and costs. 45
Ashley
L.
Hamilton .
days in jail. suspendeLI. pro- Pomeroy. $150 and \OSb . 30
bat ion. passing bad checks.
days in jail. 27 suspended .
Michael 0 . Clay. Syracuse. probo'ltion , reckless operation: ,
550. speeding. $ ~0. failure to Steven M. James. Racine.
control: Thomas F. Cummins. SJO and costs. scat belt viola~acine . SJO and costs, speedtion: Larry V. Johnson .
ing, Timothy H. De'vloss. Rey londsburg. · $50, open ·
Athens. $30 itnd cos.ts. speed- container in motor vehicle:
mg: Donald D. Oenny. Billy, D. L.eftler. Logan,. $.'\0
Pom.eroy, $20 and&lt; costs. and costs. seat belt violation :
unreasonable speed for cond: . Eddie Marcun.l , ·Middl.eport.
Joseph
M.
Duvall. · 180 days in jail, su spended,
Williamstown. W. Va:. $30 probation, theft, 180 days in
and costs. ·seat belt violation : jail. suspended. probation,
Todd Eads. Pomeroy. $30 theft: Terry D. Napper.
· and costs, seat belt violation: Middleport. S355 and costs.
Merle S. Graybt ll , Athens. 't l\'erload; Brandon J. Ogle ,
$30 arid costs. speeding: Syracuse, $200 and costs, 30
Jonathan E. Green. Pomeroy. days in jail. seven suspended.
$100 and costs. probation, probation. reckless operation:
disorderly conduct. $150 and Gregory E. Pullins, Racine .

.

Mother of teen killer charged
with providing alc.ohol to· yo.uths
MARIETTA (AP) - The
mother of a 13-year-old convicted of killing two relatives
was charged with providing
alcohol to a grou p of youths
at her house.
Authorities say the alcohol
at the gathering in October
contributed to her son sex uall y
assaulting a teenage relative. ·
Tammy Sturm. was charged
Wednesday with buying alcohol for a minor, illegally ho ~t .
ing an alcohol party and contributil1g to the delinquency
or unruliness of a child, court
officials said. Each charge
carries a maximum six-month
sentence.
The 15-year-old girl who
was at Sturm's house testified
during Bryan Christopher
Stlill1)'S sexual assault trial
last month that she woke up
with him on top of her after
Tammy Sturm bougl~ ·. alcohol
for the youths and left to go to
a bar.
· Tammy Sturm, 36, has
denied providing the alcohol.
She said she was asleep when
the drinking was going on,
and that once ~he realized

what was happening she se~l
everyone home.
· Au thorities said at least six
children. ages 12 to 18, were
unsupervised and drinking
alcohol at the Sturms residence.
"I can't say wh,ere the alcohol came from. but I ca n
prove that I didn ' t provide it,''
Tanll'ny Sturm sa id in _an
interview Thursday.
.
·
'fa!llmY Sturm is scheduled
to be arraigned May 25 in
Washington County Juvenile
Coun, which handles misdemeanor charges against adults
involvi ng juveniles.
Jurors convicted Bryan
Christopher
Sturm
in
February of shooting his aunt
and grandmother in a trailer
near Lowell in southeast
Ohio.
Was hington
County
Juvenile Judge Timothy
Williams ordered him to be
held in juvenile detention
until his 21st bitthday, with
the possibility that .he could
go to an adu lt fac ility to serve
a longer term if he commits a
crime while incarcerated.

WOUB's student-produced football
show wins videographer award
ATHENS "Gridiron
Glory," a WOUB . studentproduced show that focuses ·
on high school football in the
region, has been given an
award of distinction from'The
Videographer Awards in the
student production category.
"Gridiron Glory" is completely produced by students
and features video clips from
area high school football
games and a new s-style show
that features teams and ath· .
letes within the region. ·
It was chosen for an Award
of Distinction from 2,293
entries throughout the United
, States and several foreign
countries. The Award of
Distinction is awarded to projects that exceed industry
standards and is judged the
best of the entries within that
category.
The Yideographer Awards
are designed to identify com-·
munications professional s

who are r;tising the standards·
of the industry and to give
winners and their clients the
recognition that the work they
are producing is outstanding
and highly regarded by their
peers.
Mike Rodriguez, WOUB 's
student professional development
manager,
said,
"Gridiron . Glory" has established itself as a source for
high school football and athletes throughout the region.
The next season of
"Gridiron Glory" will begin
airing on · WOUB in August
and w iII feature Ale x
Adeyanju, a senior broadcast
new s major in the Scripps
School of Journalism at Ohio
University as the studio host,
and senior Joe Barrett , a
telecommunications major
from Canton as producer
It airs on Friday nights at
II :30 p.m. during the football
season.

Friday, May 13, 2005

Prep
Schedule
..
.
Today'a games
Tournament Baaeball

Ravenswood at Point Pleasant, 6 p m.
Track
OVC Meet at Fairland, 4 p.m.
·Tennis

Saturday'a games

. roumament Softball
Walerford/Miller Bt Eastern. 5 p.m
Track

SEOAL Meet at Logan, to a.m.
Tennis ·
·
W.Va. State TournaJnent, TBA

Sports physicals
scheduled at EHS
Sports physicals have been
scheduled at East~rn Hig h
School for May 25 at I p.m.
Any boy .o r girl that plans
to participate ih athletics during the 2005-06 sc hool year
will need to have a physical .
performed and the information packet can be picked lip
iu the high school office.
Dr. Kelly Roush will per- ·
form the phy sicals and there
will be a $ 10 fee per person.
· Contact Eastern High
School at (740) 895-3329 for
more information. ·

Lawsuit: C8 in water scuttled
$36m Parkersburg plimt deal

Local Stocks

TIRED OF JUST HAVING A JOB? LOOKING fOR
A NEW CAREER?

·

Sectional .at Portsmouth, 9 a.m.
W.Va. State: Tournament. .TBA

Meigs band golf
scramble planned
..

Subscribe today • 992-2 155

'

to the Castrop Center Open House.
.

.

.

-Please join us on Sunday/ May l5, 2005 ·
from 2:00 to 5:00 p.m.
1.

Tours will include ...

I

TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern High School will be
holding its 7th annual Eagle
Basketball Camp May 31
through June 3.
The. camp is OP.en to boys
and girl s who wtll be entering into grades 4, 5 or 6. The
cost is $30 for pre-registra- ·
tion and $40 on the first day
of camp.
Included in the camp cost
will be fundamental basketball instruction, a camp tshirt and basketball and indi·
vidual awards are possible.
For more information contact Howie Caldwell, 40878
Old Seven Road, Reedsville ,
OH, 25772.

ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP)
- Felix Escalona's RBI single broke an II th-inning tie
and the Columbus Clippers
went on to a 3-1 victorv over
the Rochester Red Wings on
Thursday in the International
League. .
With one out, Caonabo
Cosme singled against losing .
pitcher Travis Bowyer (1-1).
He moved to second on
David Parrish's base hit and
scored on · Escalona's single
down tbe leh field line. The
Clippers scored anothe'r run
on a two-out single by Ryan
Hankins.
·
Columbus (19-15) grabbed
a 1-0 lead in the second
inning. Trying to complete an
inning-ending double play,
Rochester shortstop Augte
Ojeda threw wide ·of ftrst
base, allowing Escalona to
score.

Fax -

1·74D-446·3008

•

E-mail - sports 0 mydallysentlnel.com

Soorta Start
Sher11111n, Sports Edllor
(740) «6-2342, ext. 33
bsnermanOmydaitytribune.com
Bryon Wottero, Sporta Writer

(740) «6-2;!42. ext. 23
bwahersOmydallytribune.com
Larry Crum, Spor18 WrH«

(304) 675-1333, ext. 19
lcrumOmydallyregioter.com

I

--......

•

,,

Meigs run at ~TV C ChampiQnships

•

Michael
Owen made
it a one-two
Eastern
sweep in the
1600 -meter

Holter sets new meet
record in. discus throw
.

BY BRYAN WALT~RS
BWALTERS@MYOAILYTRI BUNE.COM

MCARTHUR - The 2005
Tro· Valley Conference track
meet is in the books after
Thursday, ·and the . Federal
Hocki ng girl s and Belpre
boys'can say that they are the
best of the be.st.
The Lady Laricers defeated
second'p lace Be lpre ( 106)
by . 21 points, whi le the
Go lden Eagles fended off
host Vinton County ( 156.5)
by a sli mmer margin ef 12
points.
·
As far as Meigs Count y is

Prt:p
Bast:ba/1 ·.

concerned, it was Eastern
run ,
as
that shined brightest during
Martindal e
the two -day event. The
posted
a
Green and White ,(89) fin4:49 .3 for
ished 15 points behi nd thirdthe
TVC
place Federal Hocl\ing. and
Holter
title . Owen
the Lady Eagles (49) placed
..
.c ame
m
two points ahead of Mei gs pehind Martindale with . a
split.
fo~~~~~e~\~~eRoss Holter 'set 4: 50.5
Owen and Ch ri s Davis
a new meet . record .of !57- dupli cateLithe one-two finish
feet, 6-inches in the discus in the 3200m run, as Owen
throw. Hi s acco mpli shment calimed top honors with a
yie lded first place honors in time of 10:45.8 for Eastern.
that
event.
Darren ·His teammate .Davis turned
Scarbrough finished ,third in in a I I :05.5 sp lit time . .
the same. event with a throw
Eastern's Bryce Honaker
of 134-3. .
placed third in the long jump
Josiah Martindale and with an elfort of 17-11.25

. ·'. · '
._
._
l·!iJ

and
EHS
was the closalso finished
es"t to that
second in the
fea t, fihi sh·
ing second
4x800 meter
relay with a
in the 300m
time
of . .
hurdles with
8:54.5c•
a time of
T
h e
5 1.5.
Marauders
Meghan
?" _..-.
·. • '·..
,,.,
best
fi
nish
C
l el l a nd
·.
on the day
placed third
Oweri
was in the
Martindale · in the 400m
300m hurdle
dash for the
race, where Andy Kinnan · Maroon and Gold with a time
(44.4) edged out Eastern's of 1:07.4, while East ~rn' s
Ed Beatty by a tenth of a second for fo urth .
Jen Hayman .took thi rd place
Meigs finished in seventh in the 800m run with a time
place overall with a score of of 2:37.3.
2 1 poims.
. Eastern placed third in the
On the girls side, there 4x400m relay (4 :35.7) and
were no individual or team Meigs was also third in the
champio&lt;;Jns in any evem from 4x200 m relay (2:00 .3) to
round out the top three fin- ·
Meigs Count y.
Ashley Smnar of Meigs i&gt;hes from the county.
, ....

~t;o··

--.:·~- .
_,

-----...J

Division IV s.t:ctiona/
fiQal
.

Redmt:n

;

.Bas&amp;ba/1

Redmen's
season
comes to
abrupt end
.Bv

MARK WiutAMs

SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

Eastern sets date
for hoops camp

Contact Information

O'Bieness Memoriol Hospitai ·Outpatien~ Services
Athens Cancer Center
Athens Surgery Center •. Physician Offices .
American Cancer
Society Resource Center
.•

E~~tern,

TVC Championships

. POMERQY - The 14th
Annu al
Mei gs
Band
Memori al Golf Scramble
will be held Memorial
weekend, on Saturday May
28th with a 9am tee-off.
The tournament will be a
four man scramble brin g
your own team format. Your
· team mu st have a co mbined
handicap of 40 with only
one player below I0.
First prize will be $300
club house credit, second
place will receive $200 and
third place $100.
Cost of the tournament is
$50 per person or $200 per
team . For more information
CQUtlu.:L.lbney Dingess at
992-7141.

Columbus clips
Red Wings, 3-1

Proud to be apart of your life.

Prt:p Track and Fit:ld -

COLUMBUS - It ended
all too soon for the
University of Rio Grande
Redmen baseball team at the
NAIA
. Region
IX
Tourn ament lo~g two
games on the first day of the
four-t eam post-season event.
Rio lost to No. I seed.Ohio
Dominican 8-6, in the open·
ing game, and No.3 seed
Mourit Vernon Nazarene, 7-3,
f '¢- '),
1.
in the elimination game on
·' 't'- '
Wednesday.
·
·
Rio Gra nde (30-22) had
leads _in both ganies but was
not able to hold on. The
Redmen grabbed an early 3·0
lead in game one and carried
a 3-1 edge into , the sixth
inning.
Ohio Dominican (42-15),
, '·~I
,,
took
a 4-3 lead into the ninth
•
fram e before scoring four
times to up the count to 8-3.
The Panthers then held on as
Rio closed to 1~ithin two runs
Bryan Watterslphoto
before
the final out was
passed bat! in the fourth 1nning of Thursday's 11-2 l'(in over
recorded.
.Sophomore Nate Chau
pitched well until the sixth
inning-. Chau (5-5) suffered
his third consecutive loss .
Junior second baseman ·
Mike Golom was 2-for·4
·ly ai lowed the hosts to a step in the right direction,''
with an RBI and a run .scored,
sec ure the vi~tory in the said Bowen. "In just looking
final 2005 home game at at their body language and in
junior first ba se man Mike
Eastern High School.
their eyes, you could see
Branon was 1-for-4 with an
RBI. Junior catcher Jorge .
Afterward, Bowen spoke they were ready to play.' lt's
Morales went 2-for-5 and
more highly of his team's what I've been .looking for
knocked in :1 run . Se.nior third
errorless defense than of all season and that was probsacker Kris Schuler also colwhat his potent offense ably ihe most . encouraging
lected two hits, including a '
brought to the ticld in the thing to come out of
double_and sophomore desig:
sectional tina!.
. tonight."
nated hitter Michael Warren
"t was really pleased with
In front of that stellar
was 1-for-4 with a two-base
·the way our defense played. defense was starter Ryan
hit. .
,We have been questiOnable Smith, who allowed six hits,
at times thi s year, but tonight
Ple,ase see Season, B8
it looked like we were taking
Please see Eagles, Bl
'

Eastern 's Ken Arnsbary, left, slide into home safely after a
Miller in the Division IV sectional final at Tuppers Pla ins.

-~~-

.Eagles pound Miller for sectional title
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS®MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS Another chapter in Eastern's
storybook baseball season
came to a successful conclusion following Thursday's
11 -2 victory for the Division
. IV Southeast Distri&lt;.;t North
Sectional championship .
The Eagles improved to
18·5 on the year, wrapping
up· the squad' s best record

under Coach Brian Bowen
during hi s five-year tenure.
EHS al so secures a date in
the district toumament at the
University .o r Rio Grande
against the winner of today's
Symmes
Valley/South
Webster contest in Willow
Wood ..
The Green and Whiie battled back-and-tonh with the
Falcons (5- 15) tfirough four
innings tor a 3-2 advantage,
but four unearned runs in the
bonom of the fifth ultimate·

Wahama fends off·Buffalo for regional berth
Bend Area diamond team
into the regional semiliQals at
. Huntington Higb School on .
May 23 against the Section II
BUFFALO, W.Va.
champion
.
Coach Tom Cullen's Wahama
"We made far too many
White Falcon baseball nine
mistakes
but we were for)uovercame several · defensive
blumjers and a coupl e of nate enough to make the most
bas.erunni ng mistakes to cap- of our opportunities and get
ture the Region IV Section 1· out of there with a win,"
championship
, Thursday rookie head Coach Tom
evening after holding off a Cullen stated following his .
late Buffalo charge to claim first sectional title . "They
committed seven errors ahd
the one-run 7-6 decision .
Despite commilling five issued nine walk s which
us
numerous
errors on the day. the White afforded
Falcons capitalized ·on a chances at l'&gt;lowing the thing
seven error, nine walk after-· open but we couldn ' t get that
noon by the hosts to claim its big base hit ." ·
first sectional ti tie 'in three
Neither team recorded a
years. · The win sends the one-two-three inning in the
BY GARY CLARK

SPORT&amp; CORRESPONDENT

·'

'

seven frame alTair with errors
playing a major role in the
game's outcome.
Four of the ·seven Falcon
runs were unearned with
Buffalo also plating four

unearned digits on the and third
before 'Zerkle
evening. Each team to taled struck out the last Buffalo
eig~ t hits with all eight baner to preserve the win .
Falcon safeties being singles Garrison wen!' the distance
. while the Bi sons receiwed a for the hosts and suffered the
home run, a triple and a dou- har(t-lucli setback.
ble.
Dustin
Vickers
and
Kameron Sayre pitched six Brenton Clark were the
strong innings for WHS to offensive leaders for the
notch the mound triumph . White Falcons with a couple
with Chad Zerl:de coming on of hits each . Vic.kers chased
work the final frame to gain home two runs with an RBI
the save. Sayre gave up five single in the fourth and
hits , struck out .four and another base knpck in the
walked but two before giving sixth with Brandon Fowler,
way to Zerkle who experi- Chad Zerkle, Johnny Barton
enced a rocky beginning and Cody Herdman also colbefore
extinguishing
a leering safeties. Jeshua
Buffalo threat in the seventh . B'ranch walked four times on
The Bison were down to their the day.·
final out and had the tying
Please - Fends, B1
and ·winning runs at second

�,_

•

. TI1e Dailv. Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydaiiysentinel.com

Friday. l\1a) ll . ~005

82 • The Dailv'Sentinel

.

I'

PrEp SasEbal/· -

•

Tri-County Roundup

Warren erids season for'Gallia Academy baseball
1J&gt;

If you have a.questi'on or a comment, write: NASCAR Th1s Week. c,lo The Gas·ton Gazette. PO. Box 1893. Gastoma, NC 28053

Ail ~mes Eastem

" "u::.o:p' - - - ::::
Ne::::x"'
te71C

Chevy American
Revolution 400,
7 p.m., Saturday
Busch Series·
Funai 250.
7:30p.m., Friday

iiFX
ton Raceway's Dodge Charger Race: Funai 250
lution 400
500. He JO;ned Jeff Gordo n Where : ~1chmond {Va. )_ lnter·
.Where : R1chmond (Va. ) Inter- as a th ree -t1me W1nner in national · Raceway (. 75
national Raceway{. 75 miles ). 2005. Tile f ~t st n;ghttime m1les1. 250 laps; 187. 5
400 laps/ 300 miles.
race at Da rl 1ngron went In tO miles.
When: Saturday, May 14
overt1me. under NASC AR''s When : Fnday. May 13
last yea r's winner: Dale so-ca lled green-wh ite-check· last . year's winner': Kyle
Earnhardt Jr.
·
ered rule. when Mark Martin. Busch
Quallfyln~ record: Brian Vick· trying to pass Kahne for
·qualifying record: Kyle
ers. Chevrolet. 129.983 third. crashed on tap 363. Busch, Chevrolet. 129.348
mph, May 14. 2004.
Newmo:1n. inc red ibly'. did not mph, May 14. 2004. ·
Race record : Dale Jarrett. pit. Ne ither did Ken Schrader. Race record : Da le Ja rrett.
Ford. 109.047 mph. Sept. 6. who restarted second. and Ford. 104.928 mph. Sept. 8.
1997.
thi rd-place Carl &amp;!wards. who 1995.
last week : Ryan r~~wman al- · pitted for on ly two ti re s.· It last week: Matt Ken set11, in
most stole the Dodge Cl1arg- to6k less than a lap. h.owev-· a Ford. won the DHP 200 at
er 5'oo from Gieg 81ffle .-.. er. for B.1ffle to storm past all DarLington Raceway.
but not qu1te. Agreen-white· those m fron t of hun.
Race . Che~o•y Ame rit: an Revo-

Truck Series

UAW-GM Ohio 250,
2 p.m .. Sunday

1
'

Two different drivers, Jeff Gor·
don and Greg Biffle. have now

~

won three races each·. Two

teams, Roush Racing and Hendrick Motorsports, have combined to win nine of the season's 10 races to date. Hendrick drivers are first and sec-

competition is getting tighter.

given those facts.
" Biffle, whose success is th e
season's biggest story, IS a
throwback to an ea rlier age. He

ClteY)' Amerialn Revt)/utlon . ClreV)' #loci! &amp;Ro/1400
400 - May 14
Sept.! 0

When: Sunday. May 15
'Last year's winner: Jack
Sprague
Qualifying record •Qual1fymg
ramed out last year in f1rst
race.

Race record: Jack Sprague.
Chevrolet. 54.706 mph. May
16. 2004.
Last

r~ac~ :

Ted Mu sgrave . m

a Dodge, won the Dodge
Ram Tough 2.00 at Gateway
International

Madison.

Ra ceway

in

r::Q
::;-;;:-J Distance:........... '.. 0. 750 m;le oval
· 8'

111 .

Bankln&amp; in
frontstrclch

Length of lrontstretcH:..... I.290 ft.
Length of backstretch: ..... .. 860ft.
Mlles/laps: ..... 300 mi. • 400 laps
.

.

No. 1'0

MICHEL JOURDAIN JR.
•
' '

v·

PPC RACING FORD

E
\··,
. . •L

R ;"'

Kurt
Busch

into his own.

Rusty Wallace. is going to complete his career without ·ever
w;nning a race at Darlington.
• All five of Roush Racing's victories have occurred on tracks of
a mile or longer:

" Wallace should be strong at
Richmond , where he nas led
3,023 laps and won six times . ,
" Earnhardt Jr. was first and second in the two Richmond races
In 2004. His average finish at
the track, 8.8, ls .the best of all
active drivers. But he has ·led
· only five laps all season.
'

~Who's
~ Jeff

.

hot

Bu rhas

ton
climbed
from 23rd to
16th in the
points
standings
over the last
five

races .

... Mark Martin's fourth-place finish in Darlington moved him into sixth

•place in t he points race.

"-'s
not - Dale Jarrett has
finished 13th or worse in his

past six Richmond races ....
Matt Kenseth continues to
stiuggle. with only one top-10
finish this season.

alley

put Warren in control. The Warriors
had fi ve hits in the inning. the
biggest off the bat of Beebe. who hit
a two-ru n &gt;ingle to the gap in left
cen ter field. Bar1h followed with a
si ngle up the middle to knock in
another and make it 6·3.
An RBI double from Kimberl v
·a nd run-scoring single by Beebe
added two more insurance talli es ir·1
the fifth. then Welch doubled in one
final run in the six th to round out the
scori ng.

Warren oul-h it Gallia Academ y 9-.
2 after the third inning.' Up to that
point. though. the Blue Devi ls were
able to hang with the. newl y crow ned
champs.
Gallia scored twice in the top of
the first inning. both on .the same
play. Mooney and Clagg singled and
Haislop was hit by a pitch to load the
bases. Kin g hil a grounder to the
shortstop, whtl made a bad throw to
fit't. allowing tw Q to score.
~arre n managed to tie it in the
bottom of . the first frame on the
strength of Beebe\ solo homer and
an RBI sing le by Dunfee.
·
Haislop gave his team its final
lead by go ing deep in the third. nowever. Warren tied it at three on
another RBI single from Dunfee in
its turn that same frame.
. Carson Leach started and worked
four innings to earn the win whi le
fi ni shed up. Shaphen
Barth
Robinson took the loss.
·

s (

started ra ci ng unt il he was a
teenager. At 35; he has come

• As incredible as 'it seems.

Bank1nli in
turns 1-4

•

·came up in stock cars and never

" Many of the sport's stars -.,.
most notably Tony Stewart and
Dale Earnhardt Jr. - are hanging
in there the best they can,·piling up the top-lDfinishes and l1oping
to catch up to the Roush/ Hen. drick juggernaut that is blocking
. access to v1ctory lane.
·
" Stewart and Earnhardt have
both performed wei! in the past
at Richmond, site ·of the next
race. Earnhardt is the defending
champ io n, but that was also
true this year at Daytona , At·
lanta and Phoenix. and he won
races in 2004 at Bristol and Talladega, as well.
~ It was pleas;ng to see a sellout
crowd at Darlington. What a
shame it wou ld be for NASCAR's
most historic track to lose its
place on the Nextel Cup schedule.

1NT

rn1les). 250 laps/ 110 mites.

c he cke ~ e d fin 1sh put B1ffle
back 1n 'the hUnt. and he
seized the victory in Dar li ng-

ond in the points; Roush drivers

are third , fourth and sixth . ·It's
hard to make the case that the

Race: UAW-GM Oh10 250
Where : Mansf1eld tOh;o; Motorsports SQeedway (0.44

VINCENT- Josh Beebe's home
run didn •t end it thi s time - it was
only the beginning.
The 1'ead-off hitter's lihl · innin~
solo shot W3s just one of 1S hi~&gt; tor
Warren, which pounded out a .9-.1
baseball victory over Gall ia
Academy duri ng a Division II sec·
tiona! fi11al Thursday.
·
The Warriors (2 1A J advan ce to
the district round and will face.
Miami .Trace. wh ich u'pset No . .1
Washington Corrrthouse 6-4 in nine
tnnrngs.
· Oallia ~cademy. ·which entered
the game on a roll - beating three
teams with winning records. saw it s
~caso n end with a 13: 1-2 mark.
It was Beebe' s walk·otl grand
. slam that propelled hi s Warriors past
Athens Tuesday and into the titl e tilt.
He burned the Blue Devil s too.
though not so dramatically. by going
3-for· 3 with four runs batted in.
Alex Barth and Cody Welch aiso
enjoyed three-hit afternoons for the·
winners, while Daniel Dunfee and
Nate Kimberly had two hits apiece.
Luke Haislop 'hit a solo home run,
his sixth of the year. and Tyle'r Clagg
sing led tw ice to pace a Gallia
Academy offense that mustered only
five hits total. Matt' Mooney and
Shawn Thompson each chipped in a
single. Austin King hit into an RBI
. fielder 's choice.
.. The contest was even at 3-3 after
three innings, but a three-run fo urth

well lately." said Point Pleasant on doubles from both Johnny
Wamsle) and Jame; Casto.
coac h lam e~ Higgi nbotham ,
And Point Pleasant did ju't that.
Pitl' her Ned Park managed a ;o lid
The dama~e bc ~ ari in "hat game as well.. striJ.-i ng out ;even and
seemed to he .~routinC "t;:cmHJ inning only ·gi ,·ing up four hit 5,. and one
with the first two batters for the 13i~ -walk hefure si ttin~ down in the fifth
Blm:ks hitting for outs .
" fnr Casey wbo fini shed out the final
After Red Del'ils starter Nate inning .
.
Top hitt~f'; for the Big Bl ac ks
Adkins walked Brando1i Wa'rner.
Ricky Wyanl stepped to the plate """' Caste&gt;, who went -'-for-4 with
and started the hitting .. Hi, shol w t\\o RBi s: Watterso n hit 2-for-4 with
• the outfield \\as thrown to first an RBI and Wroten also had two
where the fir&gt;! of two error; on rhe hi h . ..
play brought Warner and Wyant
Ca&gt;ev and Stouffer added a hit aild
home fo r a 2·0 lead.
an RBI to, the , tab alo ng with
The nex l t\\·o batters wa lked and Warne r and Wam sley, who also
sin!ded before Chris Casev hit a managed a hi t a piece in the game.
double. brir1ging i-n two ;mire run·
The Red Dev.ils top sl uggers we~e
ners.
Adkins who went 2·for-3 along with
Garrett 'Watterson followed his Du sty Mullirrs. Steve Burdette and
Brad Sherman/photo
teammate with a t.louble uf his own. C h ri~ John son who each had a hit it\
Gallia Academy 's Luke Ha isi0P takes driv ing in an ot h e~ run t&lt;1r the Big the game.
a cut at a pitch against Warren.
Blacks. One more ' walk and vet
Ra\'CI1Swood pi\Cher Adkins,. who
another hit loaded the ba,scs ,,:ith shu t down the Big Blacks earlier this
Point Pleasant II ,
two ou ts,
year. on ly piched'two innings givi ng
Rav~ nswood 0
it
was
Jarrod
Stouffer
up six ru ns .. six hits and three ·walks.
Thi
s
tih1e
POINT PLEASANl. W.Va .
Point Pleasant' s boys . got a real with thd~BI gi,ing Point a 6-0 lead . He stepped aside for Burdette, Cody
at the end of the second. The inning Brown and Jarrod Shoemaker.
workout
runmng · the
base s produced fi, ·e hits with three runne rs
" It has been a rough past two
Thursday:
lefl on base.
weeks. losin~ six of our last seven,"
The Big Blacks amassed I I hits in
Anolher run was scored in the said Higginbotham . ··we defended
onl y five innings in thei r easy I I-0 third innimr on an RBI sin gle from well. Ned 1Park) h\t well ·and we ·
route of Ravenswood in Section -l GaiTett Watterson.
regained our confidence."
Region I baseball to urnament
In the fourth the Big Blacks again
This win 'sets up a possible double
action .
opened up the hitting. scoring four header tommorow where a Point win
"We hit extreme ly well. but most more run s. tak ing their lead to II .
'will give it the sectional title and a
importantly we hit ·with runners on
The runs came from an error on a lo&gt;., will produce one more game in
base, something we haven· t done steal by Warner and. two more RBi s . the best-of-three series. '
·
'

u

s

•

Jourdain's switch
from open-wheel
racing to Busch
Series isn't easy ·

'K urt Busch
vs. NASCAR officials
Busch, after being involved in an
early crasti, became further angered
about his' pla ce ment in th e running

order afte r retu rn';ng to the track. The
re;gning Cup cham pion threw a wate1
bottle at an officia l, bad-mouthed·
NASCAR over his in-car radio and
wound up bemg cal led in for a

By !VIonte Dutton '

closed-door meet;ng in the NAS.CAR

NASCAR This Week
The presen~e of Mexican driver
Michel Jourdain Jr. in NASCAR's
Busch Series is p_roof positive of just
how significant stock·car racing has
become.
·
Jourdain, 28, competed in a CART
(now Champ Car). race for the first
time when he was 19 years old . He
won for the first time in 2003, when he
also finished third in the series stand·
ings. Now he is the first Hispanic
driver ever to compete full time in the
Busch Series.
Jourdain's entire life has been "cen·
tered around auto racing. His uncle ,
Bernard Jourdain, was co-rookie of
-lhe year in the 1989 Indianapolis 500,
and his father competed in Mexico
City CART races in 1980 and '81.
Michel Jr. began competing in F.ormu·
Ia Junior races at lhe age of 12.
For all that, Jourdain knows that the
transition from open-wheel cars anda
career that mostly involved road rae·
ing is difficult. The stock cars are
awkward for road racers to drive.
They are much heavier and less sup·
pie. Driving techniques are vastly dif\ferent.
And the races, even · the Busch
races, are quite a bit longer.
"Bristol was tiring OU\ there, turn·
ing all of the time, but there was nev·
era sense -of fatigue," Jourdain said .
"The cars are heavy, but you have
power steering, and you don't have
the G·forces that I was used to.
"I'm learning so much abo ut each
track, and so many of these guys
know these tracks in these types of
cars , and they know how the track
conditions are going to be at the time
of th'e day when th~ race is to be run. I

· tra nsporter. " His actions were ce rtain ly not befitting of a champion,~
said NASCAR spokesman Jim Hunter.

"He sa1d things that are not fit for
print." Busch was penalized two laps.
and disciplina ry .action is almost certain to follow.

!'lASCAR This Week's Monte
Dutton gives his take : · Busch has

~ been widely praised for his conduct
s1nce winning the chani pionship ~ast
year. but th1s senes of Incidents re·
frects behav1or seen more co mmonly
early in Busch's career."

Evernham says thanks to
all the fans of his teams

Evernham Motorspo rts w111 hold
its· fou rth-annua l Ev.ernham·Motorsports Fa n Appreciation Day, on Sat·
urday, May 28. at its StatesVIlle.
N.C.. shops . The event will feature
Jeremy Mayfield. Kasey Kahne , En n
Crocke r. Ray Evernham and Bi ll El·
liott. all there to thank fans for their
support of th e team and provide
John ~lark/NASCA R ThiS week

Former Champ Car Series champion Michel Jourdain lr. had quite a career as an open·
wheel racer but is trying his hand at the" Busch Series this year - with limited success.

still don't know yet."
· But Jourdain has nothing but praise
for the reception he has been given.
"Everybody has been really cool,"
he said. "Everyone has acted like they
want to help me, and that is really
good.
"But sometimes .. . I think people
are able to help you with tracks and
with little details, bull he car doesn'l
feel very good and you have to work

&amp; ' Supply

Co.

that out with your guys. You don't
know @Xactly where everybody else is
running and their driv ing styles , and
there are so many things that they tell
you that it's hard (to apply ) when
you're car isn't right. There are many
things you have to work out for yourself."
at hmd;ltton50@ao!.com

St.

·

stars of Everntlam Motorsports in

person . The event will ,be held 9
a.m.-3 p.m. on the day before the
Coca-Cola 600 at nearby lowe's Mo
tor Speedway.

'

Wallace, Newman, Kvapll
available for autographs

On Fnday, May 27 : Penske Rac;ng
South's MooresVIlle, N.C ., shop will
host autqgraph sessions with Ru sty
Walla ce ..~yan Newman and Travis
Kvap il to ra1se mon ey for no-kill ani-

mal shelters. The event is scheduled

Contact Monte Dutton

7 &amp; 124 •

for 8 a.m.-5 p.m. and will include an
opportun1ty t'o wrn a .l imited"series

NASCAR Ranger boat. There will also
be a bake sale and concert.

• Pomeroy, OH

BEFORE THE RACE, STOP IN AND
VISIT OUR DELl OR HOT STUFF PIZZA!

Phone: 7-40-992-6611

•••••

-

••,.,. f'lle

....

106 North Second Ave. • Middleport, OH

•

252 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, OH

Eagles

them an opportun;ty to meet the

lea Cold Bear
Available lor Carryout!

.,..._0 5 ...........

Bryan Walters/photo
ABOVE -· Members of the Eastern baseball team pose for a ·picture after winning the Division IV Southeast District North
· Sectional tou rn ament Thursday at Tuppers Pla ins. The Eagles defeated Mi ller by a co unt of 11·2.

.Blg•acel
228 W. Main
Pomeroy, OH
992-5432

'

fromPageBl
a walk ·and struck out lO in
·the compl ete game win.
"Ryan did an outstanding
job, he 's been our go-to guy
all year,". commented Bowen
about his senior hurler. "He's
had to pitch bur . roughest
games all year long, so he
was prepared for tonight and
the tournament."
But early on, it was the
Falcons who made the tirst
strike:
A two-out homerun by Curt
Luning in the first inning,
gave Miller its only lead ot
the night at I -0.
Eastern responded in the
bottom half of that inning by
getting leadoff 'hitter Chris
Myers on with a walk. Ken
Amsbary followed with a
two-.run blast to cemerfie ld
for a 2- I edge.
Then in the third, Luning
found another offering from
Smith to hi s liking as his shot
to centerfield cleared the wall
·.and nodded the game at two.
· 'Those two · homeruns
caughi our kids' atte ntion real
quick . Miller' came ready to
play and showed us early that
we were gorng to have to
eam it " said Bowen . "After
· 3t, w~ were ready to play."
: Smith held the guests
scoreles s ·after th at third
inning, and the Eagle offense
would erupt for mne unanswered runs the rest of the

•

. way.
In the fourtfr , Amsbary led
off with a triple to righ t field.
A passed ball with two outs
. allowed Amsbary to ·slide in
safely for the 3·2 lead.
Then th e flood gates
opened for Eastern in the
fifth , as Dustin Riggs singled
with one out to start the rally.
Riggs was pinch-run for by .
Cody Gerlach, and back-toback walks Chris Myers and
Corey Shaffer loaded the
bases fa( Amsbary with two
away.
.Amsbary lifted a routine
fl y ball - to right lield ,, but
Justin Aichele couldn' t come
up wit h the catch.and all owed
Gerlach , Myers and Shaffer
to all score on the error for a
6-2 edge. Amsbary made it to
second on the dropped third
out.
One batter later. Terry
Durst lined a · shot at the
shortstop. who bobbled the
ball into left field · and
allowed Am sbary to score for
the 7-2 lead.
Eastern tacked on four
more runs in the sixth, with
Man Morri s leading .that rally
with a single to start the
frame. Joel Lynch walked to
give EHS runners at tirst and
second with one out, then
Phil Pierce si ngled to load the
bases . Myers. singled in
Morris -to give EHS an 8-2
advantage. '
With tbe' ba&gt;es still packed
with runners. Shaffer hit into ·
a fielder\ choice that result ·
ed in a fon;e out of Lynch at
the plate for two away in the

�,

-t-

Friday, May 13, 2005

·www.l1'ydailysentinel.com

Page 84 • The Uaily S entinel

Friday, May 13_, 2005

www.mydailysentinei.COJll

I

\!l:ribune . . Sentinel - ll\e
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REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
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8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

I""'

ANNOl 'NCf~\IENI~

r:__......o..JI rro
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Dr Danny Wes tmoreland will
be Opemng a D1et Chmc 1n
thenext coupleofweeks At
thiS t1me we plan to be open
on Fnday s and Saturday's
for D•et Clime Only Contact
Westmoreland Fam•ly Ca re
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Mobile Home Repair. ·---·------· --·- .............. 860
Mobile Homes lor Rent ... ............................ 420
Mobile Homes for Sale. ·--- -- -··· .............. 320
Money to Loan ....... .... ............ .... .. ................ 220
Motorc ycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ..... ..... ·--------·-----140
Musi c a l Instruments .................... ·---- -· ---- .. 570

Personals .. ...... __ __ .. __ ....... -----· -----·---005
Pets f or Sale .---· .... ___ __,._-·-· ----- ·-- ... .. ... 5 60
Plumbin g &amp; Heat1ng ............ .. ....... .. ...... ..... .. 8 20
Professional Services .. -·-' -·---- ·-- --- ·- ·-· --- -230
RadiO, TV &amp; CB Repa1r ... ........ ... .......... ... .... I60
Real E s tale Wanted ... ..... .....•...•..••. 3 60
Sc hools lnslructio n .... _, ..... ... ·--- .... 150
Seed , Plan! &amp; Fertlhzer .. ...... ...... ................ 650
Sit u ation s Wanted _ __ ---- --- --· ·--·- . --- --- -120
Space lor Rent ........... ............. ................ . , .. 460
Sporti n g Good s ... . . ...•..•..••. . •.......... 520
SUV"s l or Sale ...
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Tru cks l or Sale .............. ... ... ...... ...... ............ 715
Uphols l e r y . ... ..... . .... ........... ..••..... . ... 8 70
Vans F or Sale ............................................ 730
Wanled IO B uy •
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Wanted lo B uy - Farm Supplies. _---· --- ... . 620
Wanled To Do ........................ ...................... 180
Wanled to Rent .. .... .....••...•...............•• 470
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Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle .....•........•. .. ..... . 074
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·'

HOM£S

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5/12- 511 4 Ram or shm e
InSide garage sale 2 1/2
mil es E of Porter on 554
B1g 6 lam•ly garage saleRam tshme Sam-Spm Fn Sat
922 Jer1cho Ad ,
Che shire
Carpor t sale 4201 Addison

Thursctay -Fr1day AaCine-Frrst Road Past H1 gh
School
Home lnter1or,
Furmture clolh1ng , di shes,
baby 1tems

r·

YARll SALE·

P r. PlEAsANr

Garage Sale new convection oven new luggage dnll
press lots of f1sn1ng gear,
kn1ves. too ls househ old
lots more 6 Ston e~l:lrook
Ests 3 mrles out Sandhi ll
Ad Sat May 14th 9-?
Gtlrage Sale Thursday
Frtday
Saturday
9-2
Houseno ld 1te ms, clothes
toys mce pnces 907 27th
Street

I'&gt; A Spe;CTAloR

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•

;::;;;;::~

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( •
HIO VALLEY PUBLIS H
lNG CO recom mends tha
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'

lUIDAN

INsrnucnoN
Gallipolis Caraer College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Tod,ay r 740-446-4367,
1-800-21 4-0452

)

Counc~

tor lndeponaenr COlleges

and Schools 12748

5 - 1~

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W ANIHI

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DIRECTV
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System
FRE E Equipment and Install
up to lou r rooms 145 cnannels $29 00 a month Ask
how to g&amp;t FA EE HBO
MAX, and STARS 1-800523-7556 lor details

© 2005 by NEA, Inc.

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110

.
1

HEu•W..mn

.~10

1

HEU'WANfED

Absol ute Top Doll ar U S
Silver and Gold Cams,
Proofsets Gold R1ngs, U S
Currency -M T S Co1n Shop,
151
Second
Avenue,
G II I 740 446 2842
I \ 11'1 0\ \ II \ I

Hai rstyli st and Nat l tec tl ParamediCS
&amp;
EMT s
needed fo r new salon In neede d Apply at 1354
Pomeroy Op en1 ng Soon
Jackson P1ke.' Gallipolis
Call 992-6573
Part T1m e ·fPN. Mon day
Fnday no weekends, no
Help Want ed
Holidays, no shift work
Managers, assi stant m anApply m pe rson, Med1cal
"'ii iH H I '-1
agers cash1ers. and food
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ serv1ce employee pos1t1ons Plaza, 936 State Route 160
Gall1pohs
110
f! V ft~Je . f y ll or part I11T1 e
HELl' WAr&gt;'IID
w1th flexrble sChedule s and Pos1t10n available for counter
exce llent benefitS
clerk Must be good w1th
(Wanted ) L1censed P nys~ea t •
money and paper work Also
Therapy .Assistant for nome ApplicatiOn s available at
reliable and at 1east 25 yrs
hea lth serv1ces Please send 2943 St A1 14 I Gallipolis
ol age (background check
resume to McG raw Physic al 15054 St At 160 V1nton
reQUired ) Startmg pay $6 25
Therapy Inc PO Box 983, 56 Vme Stree t, Gallipolis
pr hr Apply at R1ver C1ty
Jackson, OH 45640 or call Or apply onlme at parmar- Perk at 2 t 577 Oh1o A1ver
(740)286-6631
stores com or lax resum es Ad , Mason 'wv (304)773to 1 740 373-6854
5111
100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts.
Secretary tor Galhpohs
Holzer Clln1c
wood Items
olhce HotJ rs of operat1on M Matenals provided
F 9am·4pm Cali (304)481 •
Human Basoyrcga
To $480/wk
1636 to schedule an
ManagerFree 1nformat1on pkg 24 hr Holzer Clime 1S •seek1ng an appomtm ent for an mter801-428-4649
HR Manager to manage all vlew
Seekmg energe tiC, bnght
col lect1on spec 1ahst Dental
backgrou nd helptul Fa x
resume 10 (740)446-4840
1

Stylist wa nted Smart Style
j'alon Full-t1me or part-time,
nou rly rate vs comm1ss1on
Pa 1d vacation, , msurance
available Please call 1-888- '
888-7778 ext 1294 ask for
Darlene
TRUCK BODY REPAIR
One of On1o's leadmg motor
earners has an 1mmechate
opemng for a heavy·duty
truck body repa1r techn1c1an
With mechamcal expenence
Wo rk
expe rience
w1th
Internationals
and
~relghtlm ers IS des1rable
F1ve day work week, pa1d
vaca110n personal ,days,
tleal th 1nsurance. pa1d holidays, overt1me pay, 40 1K
plan and un1forms are
among the many beneftts of
workmg at Arctic EJ\press
Inc W1ll pay top doltar 1or the
nght pe rson The pos1t1en IS
open now and you can begin
work lrTJmediately Fax, ema1l
or tn person appliCants are
welcome
Denver Fann1n
M• a 1 n t e n a n c e
Superintendent
4277 Lyman Dnve
Hilliard, OH 43026
Fax 614-527-4114
Email
lr lleyCarctlcexpress com
E 0 E JDrug tree workplace
Tupperware Sell or date a
s how Earn $160 FREE
Tupperware Hurry Offers
Ends May-27 1304)7735630

FurMure Sale Mollohan 5
2 bedroom, lake Dr R1o Sofa and chair starling at
Grande $400 month $400
$399 Call (740 )446 7444
depoSit fir m
No 1 pets
~
(740)245-567 1
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
-----~---- Chapel Road Po rter, Onlo
2br Trailer, AC , No Pets {740 )446-7444 1-877 -830$300 p lus/Utrthtes
and 9162 Free Estimates Easy
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must
nave f1nancmg , 90 days same as
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or (304)674-61 05
Dnve - a- httle save alai

-------- 0

W AN1Hl

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Wml
1·888·562·3&gt;45

To Do

Rl \I I "'i I \II

New 3 BR Home Only
1891mo Includes ale, delivery and set up 740. 3854367

riO

Hol\00

I..._ _FO_R_S_ALE
_ __.
·

(740)388-0 11 8

$59 000 New Haven 2 800

Ca ll Usl We do lawns a.nd sq It log cabm as IS, w/3-5
wee d-eal 1ng Ca ll for an esti- acres Call M1ke (513)314mate 1f no answer leave 2754
message (740)256-1097
1993 Sunshrn e doublew1de
DHK CLEANING &amp; POW- 28x60 3 bed room 2 bath
ERWASHING , Windows l et porches Must be moved,
Us Help You I lns1de/Outs1de, $25 000 (740)388·8978
Res 1d e nl 1a li B u s 1ne ss
Clea o- er-up!ll Whatever the 3 Bedroom 1 ba1h new w1 r1
jOb we' ll • Get-er-donell l dows , doors and k1tchen 2
Karen or Dave, (740)985- acre lawn - gold f1sh pond3633 or 740-416-1823, dnk- pnvate se t11ng but close to
everything Bulav1 11 e P1ke
cleanmg@ ya hoo com
$86 'soo Includes all appli Gentles Con tr uct1on- Home ances and some fu rmlure
Improvement
.30 years Phone (7 40)446-9220
expenence Customer sailI -Ba th
factiOn guareneed Anytlng 3-Bed room
Remodeled.
Full
Basement
wllh home Improve ment
mclude d
Compare our pr1ces Free Appliances
es11mate (740)256-6878 or Outbu1ldmg &amp; 24FT Pool
188 Park Or~ ve (304 )675(740)441-0342
7460
Georges Portable Sawm1ll,
don1 tlaul your logs to tne 3b r Double W1de, 2 full
Baths. on 1 3 acres on Rt 2
m1ll 1ust call 304-675-1957
1
towa rd Paul's Exxon.
Outbulfdmg , wrap around
Porch
Ce nlral Heat/A1r
tne best 1n cleanl1ness call (304)6 75· 1019 atter6pm
Malinda at 304-53 1-1794 or
3br House D1nmg Room,
740-992·5805
K1tche'n , Hot water heat &amp;
I Wil l do Adult Care 1n your Electnc C1ty-Water &amp; Dnlled
Home o r Prtvate Duty Well Bnck &amp; V1ny l Ell:t
1304)675-6781
(304)586·4856

___

Mo!LERs"ALEUME'i
ru

·

New L,oca llon
11 am-7pm Monday-Fnday
' 12 Pm Spm Saturday
' Sunday
US SO
Cannonsburg Ashland
H:leh1od Mr Gatti's)
922 7185
11....~606
.........

..,..,..,.!!

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F1nanc1ng
1-800-894-6997
(740)446-6579

B UIIJifNI,

SUPPLIES

r

z

Ask

$300

$1 25each
Heavy assorted
Brown layers
3 wee ks old
St Ru n Only

S1amese &amp; H1maiayan krt1ens &amp; cats S125 Phone
(740)446· 1062

Ferret lor sale W1th cage,
tood t:~n d !ttter holder and
b1rth cert1f1cate and every ~
tn1 ng you would need For
$350 Call (304)458- 1844 or
(304)610·6 51 I

3 bedroo m mobile ho me for Thomps ons .Appli ance &amp;
renl m Pomeroy area No Repair 675 7388 For sale
Pets _ 992-5858
automat1c
re-cond1t1oned
3 Br 2 Ba Mobile Home washers &amp; dryers refngera Water, Easte rn tors. gas an d eleclnc
T PI C
Schools
Call- 1-502-9 43- ra nges, a1r conditiOners and
wrmger wash ers W1ll do
0386
repa 1rs on major brands 1n
L1 ~e new 2 bedroom. central shop or at your home
ai r all appliances turn1shed
Used Furmture Store, 130
Call (740)446·2003
Bulav111e P1ke, Appliances,
N1 ce 3 bed roo m mobtle mallresses.
d resse rs
home tn Country Homes 1n couches , dinettes, recliners,
• the Shade area Water, bunkbeds
grave manu
sewer, tr ash , mcluded, $325 ments
mucn
more
a month No pels allowed, (740 )448-4782 GallipOliS
(740)685·40 I 9
OH Hrs 11 ·3 (M·S)We buy
used fLun t1re

\1(111' 11,11 II'.

1

about OU' AOHA
Member DISCoun ts on new
John Deere Equ1pment
CarmH;tlae l
EqUipme nt
AdDrable AKC Lab pupp1es
(740) 446-24 12
Vet chec ked- shots &amp;
wo rmed Yellow &amp; choc
Chick's for Sale

Chihua hua puppres Black
male $300 black female ,
$300 wh1te female $500
(740)245·5984

\II' ~\ (,

R1d1ng lawn Mow.er tor sale
It
IS a MTD Yard Mach1ne
10
FAit\ I
18/42 horsepowerflnch
11
EQlrU'\IIN I'
has a new belt and blades 11
runs real good But 1t has
2 cyl diesel tractor 4 wneel two fl at !ires For $300 Call
drive 2 sp transmiSSIOn, (30 4)458-1644 or (304)610
plow diSC brush hog, blade 65 11
&amp; eqUipment $4 000 Call
(740)367-0106
A1d1ng mower L1ttle Wrzard
12 112 H ~ -1 C er1ggs &amp;
~ Your
used
equt?ment s tratton motor 38 lllC h cut
source
Carm ichael 4speed, 1996 model S4 00
Eq"rpmeot (7 40)446-2412 (740)441 - 16~7
"
~~;r~rl:_;!!.!!..!!
':""'"~
;! "c!
e:;:-a~-c~o~;_..,
-a
-~
ero Turn -Tra k Mowers
from JGtln Deere 8\lailable at
Ll\~'i'·IY)('K
4 9"'o
lrxed
rale
fro
o;.~' "
Carm ichael Equ1pment With
John Deere Cred1t approval
18 year Itn g e w.s $125 (7 4 0) 4 46-24 1 2
each 740-388-9747orleave www caregcom
a message at 740-6699905

Block, brrck sewer pipes 3 Pygmy Goats 7wks old
wmdows, lintels etc Claude make good pets (304)882·
Wmters R1o Grande OH 2625
Call
_
_
740 245 5121

P r~ce

I

Buy 25 or m ore 75 c each
593-5073
Yearli ng Angu s Bulls, Mostly
A I oxcelle nt blo odli nes
pnced reasonably Slate Run
Farm Jackson (740)286
5395
www slaterunfarm com

r

HAY &amp;

10

1969 Vol ts wago n Dume
bu ggy F1ber gl ass body
stre et
legal
$2 500
(740)44 1-0157 or (7 40)6455141
1977 MGB Convertible fm
res tora ti on Wllh another
co mpl ete MGB lor pa rts
$1,000 (7 40) 441 -0542 or
(740)44 1-7603
1989 Ponllac Grand .AM
$550 hrm Phone (7 40)446
4248
1996 White F1reb1rd, auto V13 go od co nd
133 000
m1les Askmg $4 000 080
T-Top 740 99 2 £079
2000 N1ssan Ouest SE Mini Van 67K miles, sharp black
exteno r, leather sunroof
loaded plus VCR {740)4&lt;11
1912
2002 Cad1ll ac Dev1lle white
dmmond • fully equipped
factory warranty 22 900
m11e s hke new $24 99 5
(740)256· 1428

10

40

2003
Toyota
Spydet
Convertible Excellent col'ldl·
llon 7 000 m11es 6 speed
Sequential Sh1ft m storage
from October )o Apnl
(304)675 4318 or {304)2084128

1999 Bra ... ada fully loaded
leather dual-power seats
new t1res Alloy wheels Blue
Book pr1ce $8 750, sacnttce
S6 495 (740)645 2729 or
(740)379-2544 leave message w1ll return call

89 Burck A1vera 3 8 eng1ne
Runs good looks good alol
extras Askmg $1 000
atl
(740\446-9742

2000 Dodge Durango 4ll4
R1T Sport 5 9L V8 67K
miles loaded leather cowl
mduc110n hood
custom
pa1nt
S11 300 , 080
(740)245 0395

c

Fm~~~:::-~:-:--...,
15

•

'I'H.l i(J\."i
rowSALt

2004 Ford F 150 Supercrew
4x4 FX4 package lully
197 1 Ford P1ck-up shorl
h
b
loaded
54 VB br1gh 1 red
1
wee 1 ase many new pars
6CD changer
Tonneau
$700 Call (304 )675-6798 covor tow package 20 000
please leave message
miles Ph (740) 446-8217
1987.( Dodge Dakota 2WO
Runs grea t I 09 000 m1tes
$1 500 080 (740)256 9031
or (740)256- 1233

84 Ford F 150 4x4 automat
1c newly reburlt 302 eng1ne
AJum 1num
1ntaka
Edel
Brock cmburator new !Ires
1993 F150 No den ts no $1 400 1740)379-2826
rust 95 000 m1ies $3 200 97 Jeeo Wrangler 4cyl 5
Gall
(740)245·5815
or
speed 4WD Solt Top very
(740)418·9026
good cond1t1on (3041675
1998 Chev Silverado Ext 74 74
Cab 4x4, all power Auto 1:':30
::"'--":V~,'",·
,·,
, ---4 3L V-6-Vortel( Alum r1ms
lopper,
Pewter/Charcoal
FoR S-\LI-_
98 000
m1
E•cellent
Cond1!1on
S9 900 OBO 1994 Chrysler m1n1 van
Phone (304)675-2039 alter Runs great cold a1 r cruise
s oopm
t1it saoo oso (740)2569031 or (740)256-1233
2000 Chevy truck Z7 1 4x4
we ll mamt amed loaded 1997 Dodge Grand Caravan
VGC SB 500 Call (740)3BB 70k excellen t co ndiiiOn
0877
loaded new. brakes, t1res
~7 900 Ca ll Jay (740 )44 6
200 1 Dodge 1500 Sport VS
8423
quad
ca b
St6 900
(740)64 5·6734
1997 Ford Convers1on Van
74 ocio m1les exCellent con99 Dod ge Dakota Club Cab dillOn new tires $ 9 800
SlJ Loaded IJ-8 4x4 BeC!
(740)992-2945
liner
Ru nnmg Boards
Tonnea u Cover 95Km1 92
Plymouth
Voyager
SB 500 1304)882·2845
107,000 rn tles runs good
$800 (740)379-2826.

t

SUVs

FOH SAU .

2003 Chevy Suburban 4x4
2002 Dodge Ram 1500 SLT
loaded 52 000 m1les VG C
Red , 4 door, 360 automa t1c
$23,000 Ca ll 1740 )38 8·
Geme1nhardl 22 SP S1lver Green Fleet mult1-umt dts, 37 000 m1tes
$15 900
0877 ..11
counts
ava
1lab
le
on
new
(740)256·1 618 or (740)256·
Flute Value at S550, Will
4x4
take $ 100 Call (740)446 John Deere lfqulp mM t 6200
1nclud1ng co mmercial mow FoR SAU '
1:94=7~1._~---::---, Ing equipment compact util - 2002 ZX2 Word Escort 5
r V FRurrs&amp;
Ity tractors sk1d stee rs com speed 4 cylinder 30,000
EG'"-TABLES
1984 Chevy 3/4 to n 4x4 piCk
miles, one owner S6 000
L~---ililiiiiiiiiiilil-,..1 pact el(cavators, Gator utility
up
Newly rebu ilt en gm e
veh1cles X Senes lawn trac- (740)44 1-0157- (740)64 5S2.000 (740)446 28 15
5141
HOMEGROWN
tors, and John Deere tn mSTRAWB ERRIES
mers, blowe rs and cnaln - 2002-Dodge Stratus AIT 1991 Chevy S- 10 4 3, V6
saws Ge t John Dee re Under m11eage, wi ll sell lor 4x4 , 54 200 OBO Call
A1Ja1lable at McKean Farms eqwpment
for
less
f
pay off or someone to re 1- (304 )675·56 12
on Centenary Road and the Carm•chael
EQuipmen t nance
PL, PW, Leather
1998 Ranger 4x4 5 sp&lt;;l, 3L
Wilham Ann Motel (740)446- (740)44 6-2412
sea ts Power Seats AC
AM/FM cassette A/C, off
9442
Sunroof
Compass Auto road pa ckage new pam t
John Deere A1dmg Mowers
Manual , St1ck , TS
$6 000 080 Call after
starling at $1 ,399 Fmancm g (304 )675·5461
4 30pm (740)256·6257
avai lable su bjec t to Jo nn
Deere Cred it approval Your 99 GT Sun f1 m $3 300 0 8 0 2003
Jeep
L1 be rty
payments could be as low 99 4d r Sunhre . $2, 600 Renegade l oaded 4)(4
2002
C hrysl er $14 500
as $39 month w1tt1 $0 down OBO
O BO
Call
Ca rm1chae l
Equipment Sebrtng
$4' 650
OBO (740)256· 16 18 or (740)256·
(740)446 2412
(740)256-£ 16.9
6200

r

SHOP ·.
CLASSIFIEDS

FOR

BARGAINS

cc

C A.\II't HS &amp;
MomHHm lt.,

MmuRCY!1 .F.4

4 W HH.I .tl&lt;'

40 Maroucl'(.u~
4 WHEFJ .EH.&gt;

2002 Harley Dyna Low
Alder 3 000 m•les Garage
Kept Impact Blue St5 000
740-992 9066
--------2002 Yamaha V-Star custom
t 100 low m1leage e•cellent
condl!ton
many el!,tras
$6 500 hrm (740)245-5196
2004 RedCat1110cc
4Wheeler
Pa1d
S1 600
Ask1 ng Sl 100 (304)6754262
1304 ) 593 4290
(3011)593-0840 leave mes
sage

1992 29 AirStream Excalla
Very good cond1t1on twrn
beds Pl. (740)645-4454
1992- 29 A~rstream Excalla
Very good cond1t1on twm
beds Ph (7 4bJ045-4454
1998 30 fifth wheat travel
tra1ler double slide excel$13 900
lent cond1t1on
phone, (740)698-931 9
.,.----.,.------::-Coleman Camp1ng Trailer
12FT 2 King Beds $5'500
call for Deta11s (304)675
1731

2004 RedCat/110cc
4Sl 600 R V 1994 T1oga . 29 foot
Wheeler
Paid
Ask 1ng
S1 100 Helmet 4 500 m1les e~cellont condllncluded
1304)675-4262 ' liOn 992 -747 1
Truck Camper AC
TV
Antenna w~red for Ca ble
ll~e 11ew S6 500 (304)67584
Honda
Goldw1ng
3353
Interstate Runs e•cellent
St 500 (140)245 5429 alter
5 OOpm '
10
Hom
94 Harley Dav1dson UJtra
1\u•uon:~IENtJ;
ClasSIC t 0 000 m1tes blue
e11cellent cond111on S13 500
BASEMENT
{7 40)949-22 17
WATERP ROOFING
Harl~y Dav1{1son custom low Uncond1\1onal lllet1me guar- ,
rrder Black w/chrome tr~bal antee Local references furflames pertect shape, only nished Establlsned t 975
21 000 m1les many extras Call 24 Hrs (740) 446$9 500 (740) 41 6-22t3 or 0870 Rogers Basement
Waterproofing
(740)985 3677

(304)593-4290 (304)593
0840 leave message.

50 lklA •~ &amp; Maroks
f830
' IUR SALt .

Exc,\\AilN&lt;.

14F T FiShing Boat 9 9
aiJ JO 450 E Dol.er 6 Way
Mercury
Engme
Accessones (304)675-2915 Blade Good Undercarrrage
Ready to work
Hour s
1996 Slratos bass boat 115 unknown $ 18 500 740-992fast stn ke 2001 So ft nde
tra1ler custom cover, e)( cellent
cond11ion
$6500
(740)44 6-4987
2000 Bayllner 21 ft cuddyw/
tra1 ler many extras very
clean 304 -675-5563

~119

Get AJump
on

SAVINGS

04 Harley Davidson FLHTI Bass Tracke r 14FT wrrra11e r
$2 500 call for
Electra glide Bl ack 10 000 &amp; Motor
m11es $ 19 000 {740)44 1- Deta1ls (304)675- 173 1
9372
1998 Buell S3 Th underbolt
Harley Davidson engme
very fast spo rl b1ke. great 19 93 Ford Explo rer 4x4
(7 40 )985~ Partmg out complete Ve hishape $5 100
9857
cle 740)245-9346
200 1 Harley Road K1 ng Teal
CAMI'I-' Il' &amp;
1n color many e~t ras one
MmuRHUMf$
owner excell ent condition
29 000 mil es
$16 000 "03" Jayco Eagle 5th wheel
1740)446 02 13
1 slide out steeps 9 like
Many extra \ (740) 33 9
new
2001 Honda CRSO $1,200
1998 Kawasaki KX250, 02 18
$1 400
(740) 44 6-8 138
eve nmg (740)446-4799 exl
249 days

1984 Skamper pu p-up 25th
Ann11Je rsa ry Ed1t1on excellent co ndition 16 box AC
2005 Honda CRF250 Never and heat stove 1cel:toJ1
bee n raced Call (740)245 - dinette 52 000 (740)9 495815 or (740 }418-9026
2709)

Shop the
Classifieds!

I
•

1971 2 bedroom trailer New
carpet, new kitc hen ca binets on rented lol $3,500
OBO (740)441 -9683
20 00
Fleetwood,
front
k1tct1 en model wllh sk1rlmg
and ce.ntral air Wil l deliver
Very clean 1-8 D0-837-3238
3 mob1le homes lor sale
$2,500 each Call (740)3889000
New 14)(60, only $198 73
per mo ln cludel:i complete
set up and delivery, 740385-2434

SAVE-SAVE-SAV E
Stock models at old pnces,
2005 models arrtv1ng Now,
Coles
M ob 1le
Homes,
15266 U S SO East, Athens,
Ohio 45701 . (740)592· 1972.
"Where Yo u Get Your
Money 8 worth~

j

3 bed room apartment 1n
Middleport No Pets 992- 5858
llvmg Room Swte us ed
Old
Rec liner'
Dresser,
Apartm ent. Pt Pl easant
2751275 dep No Pets Rocker, &amp; Mise Items
Homestead Rea ltY Broker Evenmgs (304)8 82-2637 or
0 4 0 03 9 2
(304 )675-4024 (304 )675· ~17_4_
:._
) _:4.:...'__-:~---

Lars &amp;

L_ _..,;A,OCRF.AiiiOiOiiGiiiE--.,1
-112 tv; , lol Tycoon lake on
Eagle Ad Co Wate r (not
lake
l ront)
$7, 500 00
(740)247-1 100 or (304)532·
6271 cell

2 acres more or less, all utilthat 7 Homes under $1 4 000 ities, paved road, 2 m1les
II you have a Job
from C hester
$16 000,
nobody wants .All phases of Will deliver 740.385·4367
1304)483-7550
Construct1on
call
Matt
Blankenshlp(304)895-3720
Attention!
I~ I \ I \I '
Local company offenng "NO
In Home Quahty Ch1ld Care
DOWN PAYM EN T" p ro·
Prov1der Full &amp; Part-time
grams for you to buy your.
Opemngs hours 7am-6pm
home mstead of rentmg
call Shelly (304)675-2343
• 100% financ1ng
KRS Lawn Mow1ng serv1ce • Less than perfect cred1t
02512 ~ 07Attentlonl
and hau 11ng D1scount for accepted
Local
company oflenng "NO
•
Payment
could
be
ttle
senrorsl (740)245-9240 or
DOWN PAYMENr pro
same as rent
(740)339·0066
l ocators grams tor you to buy your
Mortgage
owure
home Instead ol rentmg
(740)992·7321
Carpet-Cleaning
• 100% f1nanc 1ng
No Down Payment Possible, • Less than perfect credit
Brand New Method
~ 900 square It house, 3 accepted
Dry In 1 Hour
t&gt;edroom, 2 bath lull base- • Payment could be the
No Steam-or-Shampoo
ment. new heat pump, sets same as rent
Free -Esti mates
on 3 acres SA . 7. Eas tern , Mortgage
***C learly Clean•••
l ocators
Schoo! 01str~ct l740)985- (740)992-7321
301 75-0022
4321
Need Someone to Mow Yard
1 bedroom house
~ ~
Remolded
3- Garfteld Ave $350 ' month
near l eon Ca ll (304)675- New
Bedrooms 2-Bath 2-Car- Call
7612 a'n d leave message
(740)441 ·0 194
or
Garage on 1 arce, Sunset (740 }441 -1 184
Lane
off Sandhill Ad
Askmg $90,000 Call fo r 2 bedroom house base·
.Appomtment (304)675-4352 ment. garage 1 m1te from
town $650 month Call
House for sale at 648 4th (740 )441 -0194 or (740)441 ·
1184
Ave Call (740 ) 388~8 1 64

o

H P LASSIFIEDS
FOR BARGAINS
•

SPA OUTLFT
Super Sale

I \IHI ... II'I'III"'
,\ 11\1-... 1()( t\

Ready to move In 3 BA
Home 1n country settmg only
19 8/mo with 10% do wn
740·385·4367

Ir

tlome Pnvate room an d
bath 3 hot meats Ca ll

Appliance

7999

n&gt;RRt:NT

New 3 80 2 Bath Home
Only 198/mo Includes ale
delivery and set up 740385-9948

•

An Excellent way to earn HR !u nctiOns 1nclud1ng, but
not llm1ted to, employment
money The New Avon
employee relal 1ons. benefitS
Call Ma nlyn 304-882-2645
appra1sat program pollc1es
Av'O NI All Areasl To Buy or and proced ures. workers
Sell
Shirley Spears 304- compensatiOn and unem 675· ,429
plbyment Tl1 1s person Wi ll
also be responsible for manBusy Accounttng Office
ag1ng all processes within
seekmg Part T1me
the
HRIS
data base
Employment 1n the Pomt
BacheJors degree reqwred
Pleasant area Send
Three to live years o f HR
Resume to TSC t t
expenence
preferred
200 Ma1n St
Cand1date must have strong
Pomt Pleasant , WV 25550
organ1zat10nal, communiCaCecil 1- Walker Machinery tion leadersh ip and co mCo. 1s lookmg for a Delivery puter skills
Driver/ Warehouseman for
Qualified applicants may
our Jackson Ohio brancn
apply to
Candida te must have a curHolzer Chmc
ren t Commercial Dr1ver s
f!luman Resources
License Excell ent Beneht
90 Jackson P1ke
Package EEO Employer
GallipoliS Oh10 4563 1-1562
FaJ\ 740-441-3592
Please submit your resume
Applications
may be
lo
retneved from
www holzerclmtc com
Cec1l I Walker Machmery
~qual Oppcxtumty Employer
•
co
•
PO Box 2427
Charleston, WV 25329
McClure's Restaurant now
ATtN- Human Resources .tunng aU 1oCat10ns full or
De pi
part-t1me. p1ck up appliesJackson Ohio- "
Don at tocat1on &amp; bnhg back
DellveryfWarehouseman
between
to ooam
&amp;
~ 1 OOam
Monday
th ru
Cook needed appy 1n perSaturday
son Holi day Inn of Gallipoli s
No phOn e calls
Mechanic
needed
Dom1no s now Hlnng
EJ~penence IS required Call
Sale Drrvars
(740)446-2263 for an InterAll Locat1ons
VIew
Apply 1n person
(304)675-5858
NEED ESTIMATES ON
(740)446-4040
ROOFING &amp; PAINTING

!=

New 3 BR 2 Bath Sectional
Home
Onl y
249/mo
Includes AJC, d elivery &amp;
setup 740-385-7671

Ass1sted llv1ng care In my

A

M1nrature Pmcl:lers 1 mate
G RAIN
1emale,
bl ack/tan,
latls
Warehouse
docked dewclaws removed Tobacco Plants lor sale Call
wormed Ready May 16th
1n Henderson WV
PreTh ree Bedrooms Pomeroy
$300 each (7 40)388-8124
owned applica nes starting at
$400 00 pe r month Plus
$75 &amp; up all under war ranty
Atte nt1on
Commercial
depOSit 992-0064
we do serv1ce work on all
Mowers Landscape rs, and
Make and Models (304)675 l'JfOIIU HOM&amp;&lt;;
Contractors· Ask us abo ut

Thl• newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertisement. for reat
e• tate which lain
vlofetiDn of the law. Our
readere are t'lereby
Informed that ell
dwelling• advertl••d In
thla newapepar ant
available on an equal
opportunity baAea

www !J!!.IIpollscareerr.ollege com
Accred•led Member Accreditin g

Goous

Small 2 bedroom house
$475 month 1 m1le from
tow n Call (740)441 -0 194 or
(740)441· 11 84

All real estate adnrtlsing
in thht newspaper 11
•uf)tecllolhe Federal
Fair Hou•lng Act of 1968
whi ch makes II illegal to
adver1iae "any
preference, llmftalfon or
dlecrlmlnatlon based on
race, c olor, religion, aex
famlllalatatu• or nallonel
origin, or any Intention to
make any •uch
preference, llmflatton or
dl•crlmlnation "

MoNEY

ScnOOI.S

Yard Sale 19~ 3 Jefferson
Blvd (besrde ERA) Sat May
14th 8 ?? Ram or Shme
Established Healli'ig-Coohng BUILDING (304)&amp;75-1333
Men's
w omen's Brand
Compa ny · m Gailla Cou nry 9AMTO•PM
Name Clo thing Bedroom
loo l&lt;mg for expenenced
Newt Report.r
KitChen &amp; MISC Items
Installers and rechn1c1ans If
Gall tpohs Dally Tnbune
Interested send resume to
has an 1mmed1ate openCLA Box 568 cia Gallipolis
Ing for a full t1me N.ews
Tnbu ne
P0
Box 469
Repor ter Please s end
Gallipolis, OH 4563 1
resume. wr1t1ng
and
cover
letter
to
J 11T1
Help wanted· Darst Adult ·
Freeland
82
5
Third
Ave
.
Grou p Home, (740)992 ·
Galhpolt s, Ot'i1o 45631
5023

:-=:--,

Wanted Billing person for
phys1ctan off1ce Pa ri t1me
Must have rehable transportatton and medical off ice
codmg and b1lhng ex per1ence- computer and typ1ng
skills a must BenefitS available Send resume to CLA
Box 569,
Gallipoli s
TnbtJne
P:O Box 469,
Gall pohs OH 45631

c,~o!&lt;-11 WH'f A/ol NAPPW6. ~

- - - - - -- -- -

~

IO

HoU!."EHOw

Respon sible couple to rent 2
1m 11e from
BR home
Galhpolts off State Rt 588
$400 per month, $400 secunty deP.OSrt, relerences a
must (740)446-34 13

FOR SALE
lwnght@lc.net

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Miscellaneous Merchandlse. _____ ___ __ ,_______ ____ S4Q

ads must be prepaid"

YAIll&gt;SALE

FoLJnd- gentle black l ab w1th
3 cats &amp; kttten s al l different co lla r Middlepor t Football 131h/ 14th 9 00-5 00 First
colors Call (740)388-0-406
sale 10 15 'yea rs Men's/
F1eld area (740 )992 -1780 women s cl othing, table
or 7.40 992-74 15
lamps Maytag washer, too
3 pupp1es, 2 g1rls, 1 boy 4
many 1tems to mentton
weeks old par t Mm P1n &amp; Fou nd Wh1te long-ha1red
Goo d clea n sale
C hI h U a h u a/S hI h- TZu cat, Co urt Street area Call
to 1dent1fy (740)446-3567
(304)937-3374
Fn 131h- 3-6pm Sat , 14thafter 5pm
8am-4p m 224 F1 rst Ave
8 K ttten s. 2 mon ths old Lost dog- small long hmr, Ra1n or sh1ne lots o f ChilCalico Mitte n Paw lnsh bla ck &amp; tan markmgs dren lad1es clotnes, great
Cream &amp; Black (304 )675- Chihuahua Star Han Ad . ch1ldren toys many m1sc
7137
Salem Center area Reward, 1tem s Pa rk on Street walk
calf (740) 698-6502, 740- up dnve
Free k1ttens to good hom a 742- 1083
Fn Sat Sun Sam Spm 230
(740)843-5268
Lost Male Beagle w1th l inwood Dr (off of Butav ill e
Shocking collar, lost m TN T P1ke) Numerous boy baby
Free to good home k11l ens 5
area Reward (304 )67 5-2245 clolhes •
weeks old
Call -740-992·
6894 eve n1ng s
Los t- dark b rown/black dog Humane Soc1ety fun d ra1se r
"Biack1e " collar w/tags St 9-5
May 13-14
1031
Free to good home 2 rabbit Rt 681 Tuppers Plain area Second Ave Huge seleciiOn
clothmg housewares colgu1nea p1gs 3 cats roosters Reward (740) 992 2042
lect ibles
Re freshme nts
Call (740)256-6433 or leave
Los t Fe male Tabby lo ng
available
message
ha1 red ca t VICini ty ot Kmeon
Dr Call (740)446-0 35 0
Lg yard s ale m1 sc rtems 3
G1veaw ay Small female cat
mrles o ut St At 775 Wedgreylt1ge r stnped already Sh1h-Tzu typ e dog fou nd
Saturday
spayed good w1 th k1d s near ch rldren's home Call to
(740)441 -156 5
1den t1ty (740)446-4963
Movtng sale Couch love
seat 0-bed futon tables
etc
(740)64 5-2096
(740)446 -6656
4x4's For Sale ............. ................. ....... ...... .. . 725
Open1ng Fnday May 13st
Announcement ............... ......... . ....... ....... .. 030
Cold Mounta1n Condiments
Antiques ..... ......... ... ......... .. ..... .... ..... ....... 530
and Craft s Int ersection
Apartments lor Rent . ........... .. ....... .... ..... .. . 440
Lincoln P1ke and State
Auction and Flea Market.. .. ...... ....... .... . .. ... 080
Aoute 14 1 Wood crafts
Auto Parts &amp; Accessones ............. ........... .. 760
ant1que
lam ps handmade
Aulo Repair .•... .•. . ... ..... ... . .. ..... .. .. .. 770
qu1lts Am1sh baked goods
Autos lor Sale ... .. ....................................... 710
Am1 sl1 made candres 3 1
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale ........................... .. 750
vaMMS Am1sn made 1ams
Building Supplies .•. .. .. .... .. . .. . .... .... .. ... 550
and ]elhes Open spec1al
8us1ness and 8ulldings ... ..... ...... ............. .. 340
Hang 1ng Baskets $8 50
Business Opportunity .... ............. .'.... .... ..... 210
each
Bus10e ss Tratnmg .. .. ·---·-· -- ---·--. ---- --- ..•. 140
Camper s &amp; Motor Homes ............. ... .... ... ... 790
Yard sale - Saturday an d
Camping Equipment ·--· --- -- ·---- ·- -·-- ·- -- .... 780
2060 George s
Sunday
Cards of Thanks ...... ... .. ... .... . ..... .. .. .... .. ..... ,..D10
Creek Ad 9-6 Cloth ing,
Chird/Eiderly Care .............. .. ....................... 190
lndran rtems m1 sc 1tems
Ele ctncai/Refngera tion .......... ....... ----- ·-- · 840
74
YARD SAI.F.Equ1pmen1for Rent ... ..................... .......... ..480
PoMEROl'/MIDllLE
Ex cavating . ,... . .. . ..... ..................... .... 830
Farm Equipment..... .... • .... .. . ... . ...... .. .. 610
Farms lor Renl. ..... ..................... .. ............. ... 430
3 Family Garage Sale -May
Farms l or Sale .... .... ... .......... .. ........... .... 330
t 3tl'l -14th
3 mrl es 'East
For Lease .................. ................... ................ 490
at Tuppers Pla1ns S A 681,
For Sale ....• .. : ... . ............ .................. ....... .... 585
Turn rrght on Joppa Road
3rd dwell1ng (right) Home
For Sale or Trade .. ... ___ -- --· ___ ·-- -·· ... .'.... .. 590
Fru11s &amp; Vegetables ... .......... ........ ......... ..... .. 580
lnter1or entertainment-center 'fV storm door lawn
Furnished Rooms. -- -- ·----· .. ............. . · --· . . 450
cha1rs -shelves
d•shes.
General Hauling .... ..... .. , ........... ...... ........... . 850
Chnstma s 1tems, M1sc
Giveaway .......... ..... ....... ......... .............. ....... . 040
Happy Ads .... . .... ... .... . ... ...... ..... •• ... 050
Fru;jay, May 13&amp;14&amp; 16 On
Hay &amp;. Graln ............ ............ ......................... . 640
Elm
bestde
Methodist
Help Wanled .... .......... . ...... , . ... ................... 110
m
Racme
tclose to
Church
Home lmprovem(tnts ... .. .........t .... . . ... .. . .... . .. 810
Southern Local School
Homes lor Sale ............... ................. ...... ..... . 310
Camper, dishes ch1ldren s
Household Goods .... .. ... .• ..•. •.•. . •.. .. ... 51 0
clothes and toys Lots More
Houses lor Rent ... ............... ............. ......... .. 410
In Memoriam .. ...... ..•....... .... ..•.... .••...•....• 020
lnsura n c e .............. . ....... .... .. ........ ..... ...... ...... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ............ .. .......... 660
L1veslock .................... ---· ...•. ·--·····--··- ........630
Los t and Found ..... ......................... ............. 060
L oi s &amp; Acr eage .•.•.•••.....••...•... ...... ..•........... 350
Mi s cellaneous ........................ .............. ~ ....... 110

All Displ a y : 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publk:atlon
Sunday Display : 1 :00 p . m.
Thursday for Sunday&amp; Paper

One BR apt 1n Spr1ng Valley
WID tlookups $290 per
month +dep (740)388-00 17
or (740)339·0362

..,t....FOiiSRil~tfw
iiiCEiilir..,;,..tl r FU~~n:

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
fi~
Jr!',
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics SO¢ for small
•
$1 .00 for large

CARLYLE

Pi~e Fnday/ Sa tu rday May

---

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Display Ads

Dally In- Column ; 1 : 00 p.m .
Monday - Fri d a y for Insertion
In N e xt Day "s Pap e r
Sund ~ y In -Column : 1 :00 p . m .
Fri d a y F o r S undays P a p er

declawed older cat to good ..__ _i C.ii,A
illiiliiliii'OiiO.iiilsio·_,.
home (304)662-32 18

~~~--=-----...,

Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

O r Fax To (7 40) 992-2157

Offtee 1/oW's-

\\\01 \(I \II \IS

l&amp;egister

Sentinel

112 VInton Court
Gallipolis OH
3 Bdrm 1 bath Cn trl A!C,
WID hoo k up Refndg &amp;
Stove 1nctuded City scnool
S500 mo $450 deposit No
pets
Ref
requ1 red
(304)675-2525

Tara
Townhous£1
Apartmen ts Very Spac1ous
2 Bedrooms, CIA t 112
Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby,
2 Houses ( 1) 3 bedroom Poo l Pat1o Start $ 3851Mo
( 1) 4 bedroom $900 &amp; No ~Pets
Lease Plus
St.OOO plus depoSit Call Secuflly Depos11 Required
(740)256·8 152
(7 40)446•348 1
2br Small House S275 plus Twm Rivers Tower IS acceptUt11111es,
No
Pets mg apprca110ns
I
for wa1t1ng
Relerences (304)675- 487 4 hst for Hud-subs1zed 1- br
O( (304)674-6105
apa rtment call 675 6679
EHO
3 bedr oom large yard no
pets Ref &amp; dep Patr 1ot Valley .Apartments Mason.
: (740)379·2 540
WV
currently accep ting
a,pphcat1ons Apply at 501Brand new 2 bedroom Shawn ee- Trall
m Pomt
house 1n tOwn $600 monlh Pl ea sant
Ap pl iCa ti On!\
or
Call
(740 )44 1-01 94
accept ed on Tuesday HUD
(740)44 1-1184
ass1sl ed only 675-4900
In town locetton- 1-2 BR
RanCh home n1ce yard AC
..
References
reqwred
• $450/mo rent &amp; $450 Sec
Dep You pay all util1t1es For Lease Off1ce or retail
6/15
Call spaces 1n very good cond1·
Avetlable
t1an DoWn town Galrrpolis
(740)446·3644
Approx 1600 sq It each 1
Newly remodeled 3 t&gt;ed- or 2 battls Lease pnce
room hou se w1 lh yard &amp; gar- negot iable to encourage
den
on
Jencho
Ad , new
busme ss
Call
Cheshire OH References &amp; (740)446 4425 or (740)446
secunty depos1t reqUired No 3936
ms1de pet s or s mok1ng
\II U&lt; I! \\IH~I
(740)367·704 7

'

To Place

rltrtbunt - Sentinel - l\.egister

CLASSIFIED

We Cove
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties Like
NoOne
Else Can!

The Daily Sentinel' Page 85

,.

1

5540, ask tor Nancy

Mov1ng Sale Furmlure and

e each Street, Midd leport

M lsc

House hold

,'

Items

furmshed apartment, utili- ;1-7:4-:0~)4
:-4-:1:-·0=2~9~2-:----­
tles pd No ~Is Depos1t NASC.AR Tickets
and ret 740-992-0165
4 Busch, 4 Nextel· Coca
BEAUTIFUL
UENTS
AT
PRICES AT

APART· Co la 600 May 28 - 29
BUDGET Chrysler sectiOn, Row 48
JACKSON $BOO 1740 )339. 021B

ESTATES , 52 Wesowood
Dnlftl fro m $344 "to S442
- Walk to s hop &amp; mov1es Call
Equal
7 40-446-2568
Hous1ng Opportunity.

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, P1pe Reba r
For
Concret e
Angle
Chan nel , Flat Bar, Stee l
Grat 1ng
For
Drams

•

I
I
'

:
•

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· Dr1veways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE !
Scrap Metals Open Monday
&amp; ,:
Towntlouse
apartments Tuesday Wednesday
•
a nQior small houses FOR Fnday Sam-4 30pm Closed
Saturday
&amp;
R ENT Ca ll (740)44 1-11 11 .lhursday,
fat" apphcahon &amp; 1nformat1on . unday (740)446-7300
GraciOus living t and 2 bedroom apartments at V ll lag~
Manor
a nd
Alvers1de
Apartments m Middleport
From $295-$444 Call 740992 -5064 Equal Hous1ng
Opportunities

Oak Entertamment Center
$50 1304)675-2915

One large Ruff-Haus dog
house Good con01t10n $25
Dog kennel fehce a sections Sections are 4 hrgh X
Excellent c onditiOn
6'
Modern 1 bedroom apt Call $250 Call (740)245·5128
(740)446.()390
Pole
Barn
30x50x 10'N1ce 2br. Apartment,wtGas $6 795 mc lud es Pamted
· Heat!AC,
located 1n Pt Metal. Slider, Free DeliVery
$4 ,595
Plea A el r 1dg/Gas~ K 1tchen 24x32x10 $13 ,995
'Range Furn1sned
WID 40x64x12Hookup
$300/Month (937)599-7740 httP Unatlon S20010eposlt ( 304 ) 675~ 7628 wjdeoo!ebarns corh ,

•

..

i

IOOg

••

I

®alltpolislailp ~rtbune The D~ily Sentinel ~otnt ~feasant l\eglgter
L ·-·~~t~~.~~.-. . _,_,_J~.~~.~~.-.._ .. _,,_L~.~:~.lli...:...... _j
•

I

�·.

·•

.,

----Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel-

Friday, May 13, 2005

ADVERTISE YOUR
BUSINESS
BISSELL
BUILDERS InC.

Siding • Nl..'w Garage.,
• R(:pJ.accmcrH ·.

PERMONTH!

Wim.h l\\.., • R!-X.1fing
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

" "''Mr

T ERRY ?S ENGINES

FREE ESTIMATES

t Warranl ~

Sales &amp; St·n·ke
·
820 East Main St. • l'um t' ru~. Olt -1!"76'.1
992- 1033

The Daily Sentinel
.
.

Call B.D. Cons!.
fo r a ll vour honu·
repa ir m·fds, mofinl!.
siding, add -o n~.
re modeling elc.,
f ree es tim ates
(740) 991-2979
lean mt.·ssu 't.'

I

740-992·7599

ROGER HYSEll
GHRHGE
Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
.

Public N util..-cs In

992-5682

N~ws pUIJ t.•rs .

.-4...

,"\

PRIVATE GYM

.... K J 7 2

.. .45783

=~

32..

JONES'

Tree Service
Top : Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

• Tilsk Master Tratt ors 26 horse- 38 horse,
4wd {I ~·eu wa rra11t~·)

• Fa rm Pro Tr ar tor s 20 horse - 30 horse
loud t r s, finish mowers, tillers
NE W ARRI \'A I_ZTR Bhuri ~Zl·rn .ltt n l
Radius Mower) 30 llll ' h ..:uUu q,, H tdt h I ll 50
inch cutting " 'idt h 3 year warranty
T&amp;D TRACfOR SALF_.S &amp; EO!JIPMENT
right in the lteairl nf Cheste.·

I NEED SUMPIN '
NICE FER GRANNY'S
BIRF'DAY

HOW ot:.D ·w iLL
SHE BE?

!!

alld Smiling
Frit rrdly Faces.
OPEN
M on ·Fr i.
9am t o 3pm '

r)H: 992-nSJ .

SAY .. ,

paper

ROBERT
BISSEll
COISTRUCDON

740-992-lm

BertNird D. Gilkey
candidilte for

Council

South might pass . au! two spades. but
with an Independent seven-card sUit,
probably he should co rrect to three dtamonds.
Two spades rates to fait by two tricks.
But what happens in three diamonds?
West leads the heart king. When East
signals encouragemen t._ wtlll the heart
nine, West continues with th e heart
Queen and t1 is third·heart to East's ace,

;. ;. . .;_____________. i
THE BORN LOSER
.

F"'PICK. OUI 1-.t-1\C£ Wl!-1€.\0 GO ~

l'f!r,.,_,

VI::K'&lt; WE.U., Sli:. !
5 'i W.E. GLf&gt;..~ OR

w1\f\ 1'\'i PORl( (1-\01'5,
WILL '( /1., f&gt;..C.(.

BOnu:.

7

7

"'l ·

P'BR..IW, ~ f&gt;.. GL~, Of (.()Ui::.~.''l'
'i~ 001-\'1 t:)(.\'EC\ I':E
.
TO 1&gt;1:.11'\K OUTOf Tl\E .
BOTILE. It--1 /1. PO::&gt;I\
JOit:IT UK£
Tf\\S, OO'i~ ?

···-

IMPORTS
Athens

Whaley's Auto
Parts
Sl : Ri. 68 1.-Darwin, OH

74().. 99nOI3 or 740- ~ 92- 5553

PEANUl'S

Restockiii!J /.nle .\"bdel Sa lonnol
ulld _4 /'ter .\forket'

T~IS STIIPI D

ERASER SMUDGES
EVER'&lt; THING !

See Brent or Brian Whaley
M-Fri 8:30-5:00
Sal. 8:30 -Nqon

PENCIL ERASERS ARE
SPOILED &amp;'f' El&lt;POSVRE
ULTRAVIOLET Ll6f.IT OR
OZONE IN THE AIR , SIR ..

AN ERASER CAN EVEN BE
SPOILED 6'&lt; LEAVIN6 IT
. ON A WINDOWSILL ..

'9" column inch weekdays.
•tr oa1umn Inch Sat. 01' ;)UI'l~Y

29670 Bashan Road
RaCtne. Ohio

Sizes 5'x10'

REGISTERED NURSES
Per Diem
Pleasant Va lley Hospita l IS accepting .
applications IOJ Per D1em Registered Nurses
in l he ICU deportment. '
Excellent solory. holidays, heohh insu rance
single/family plan , denial plan , life
insurance, vocation. long-term disobilily and
retiremenl
Send resumes to

Pleasonf Volfty Hospital
cio Human ReSources
2520 Volfty OriYa
Point PI '1001, WV 25550
(304) 675-43-40.
www.pvalley.org

AAIEOE

.
'
Til ERE 5 MY PR06LEt&gt;\.
MA'AM .. MY f.IEAD IS
SPOILED FROM SITTING

TOO CLOSE TO THE
. WINDOWSILL ..

Sun . Closed

Advertise
in this
space for $1 04
per month.

: SUNSHINE CLUB
D6 'rlJIJ KI\OIJ
fUM,F~?

GARFIELD

Hill's Self
Storage

Gallipolis'.s Great
Garage.Sale
Saturday, May 21st
9 am til3 pm
FASHION BUG
2 Days Only Sale !
Fri. , May 13 &amp; Sat. May 14
40% off reg . Priced ite.m s
. Excluded "Priced Just Righi"
Extra 20% off Red &amp; Yellow
sticker items 65% off Fine Jewelry
Ohio River Plaza Gallipolis , OH
(740) 446·2009

to 10'x30'
Ho11rs
7 :00AM · 8 :00PM

1'\o!EN WE RODE 1'HE
SCREAMING. WEEVIL ,__..,_,_

NORTHUP IOIGE

HEY! t 'M

Upper River Ro.a d • Gcllli~lis
74D-44"6-0842 • 949-1155 Evenings
252

HAVING

BREAKF~1'

HERE!

•

ADVERTISE
IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH
GRIZZWELLS

c ost of fertilizer got you
17.·17·17·
$265 ton ('Nhile Suppy Last)
• Mushroom' Compost
Avai lab le
$35 - I ,000 lbs App•o&gt;. weight '-=='--'
18 spreader buggies a~Jailable for use
Airway pasture renovators and seeders
available to rent.
licensed agronomist on staff available for
consulting.

SHADE RIYE R AG SE RVICE
.15537 St. Rt. 7 :-oorth
Pomuo~ . O hio

East should lead his last heart. South
will probably ruff with the 10, jack or
queen of diamonds, and We~t should
discard. Tt1en, West gets two trump
tricks, not one. ·
Do not overrutf with a high trump if that
honor wi.ll still be a wtnner later anQ
there is a chance that a lower trump has
just been promoted (unless you have
something vital to do 1mmedialely) .

. CELEBRITY CIPHER
by luis Campos
Celebr~

Cpr Cf)'plogfant&gt; are r.:na!ed from qwtaWOS tl)· lamovs people past.arcl J;Jewnt.
Eac111Btlef In the dpher s1anas !or ar.otnet

Today·s clue: v equais B

" M

BSLU

OSZ!IAI

GO· EMAI
GBB

EYSNU

JYS

RSA ' E"

TASJ

ES%

M. '

EYU

JGK

EYMAT
ZK

M' Z

z

VGOT.
ASE ,

OYGPGOEUP ."

NMFOZSPU

Astro.Graph

inspiring to be part of this musical community.' - Alicia Keys

T~~:t:~T

-.r~:

Saturday, May 14, 2005
By Berni ce Bede O•ot
The year ahead coul d t ur n ou t to be
one o f ftie lu ckiest times o f you r life, It
appe a rs that fortuitous breaks could
occu r for you in a number o f a reas
wher&amp;.ryou will derive b e n efits thAt'll
help achieve yo ur goa ls ..
·
TAURUS (April 20- M ay 20 ) - W ork

ic) 2005 by NEA. Inc

.

5·13

&lt;0@\'tl!N\-l£"£trs•
14 l te~

WOlD
GAM I

iy ClAY ·1. POLLAN'

ieilers · of th e
0 Reo rrong11
sc roinbled words befour

low to form fou r titriple

wo~ds.

T UJ L Y5

on labors of !ova today that you've

740-949-2217

. I

.'

DVDE , YOU
PROMI SED.

740-742-2293

BULLETIN BOARD

· What next?

•

H'Upp
93 Columbus Rd.
r·--

35 Uke-ol bricks
36 Lass
expensive .
·38 Copes with
change
39 IBM "brain"
41 Chorlll
section
42 Bartok or
Lugosl
43 Put
45 Arm bone
46 Blurts out
47 Music .
genre
49 Egg -'yung
51 Velvety
aurlace

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'lleel panola special time. llhink il is definitely

-BIG NATE

45771'

Middleport
November 2005

'.

Help Wanted

F~bcky·,·,~a"

as proiHs
48 Salamander
50 Course
of action
52 Dismounted
53 Outback
jun!par
.mine
15 Sin.k part
54 New Age
16 laptops
sln!l"r
17 Castaway 's 55 Cats teet
. refuge . 56 Brillo rival
18 Thick soup 57 Rough ·life
It Taoism
20 Brackish
· founder
22 Dcwn with
DOWN
lao· 19 Metro RRs
a cold
21 Nelertltl' s
23 Hot time
1 Interest
amt.
In Paris
god
24 Small jobs
2 Tombstone 24 - kwondo
27 - Rico
25 "Tha Four
deputy
30 Mme. Gluck 3 Genesis
Seasons"
'hunter
of opera
star
31 Nee
4Red
26 Urban haze
32 Scrap
condiment 27 Fizzy ·
of cloth
5 Use force
drinks
6 Jiffy
34 Shoguns'
28 Small
capital
7 Health-club
combo
35 View tram
staff9fs
29 Cereal
lnnsbruck
8 Worker
grains
36 Quote from 9 Remove
31 Kitchen
gizmos
from office
37 Marbles
39 Opted lor · 10 Paris
33 Command
40 Slip on
alrpqrt
to a horse

stronger hand's suit is noticeably super;.
or to his partner's - as in this deal.

/, .

see

47 Realize,

One time to tgnore this is when the

Ir

20 Va r. $5.95· $7..9l
Perennials 6" - I"
$2.95-$5 95
Potted Plants 4"' - 12"
$1.25-$ 12.95
12.. Ferns $IO.lJ5
Open Daily 9-5:
Closed Sunda '

Sa me Grral l..oJl' Prices

•
!

CAN'T

l

J.W-992-5776
Bask et s-

HMMM ...

I

Syracuse. OH

10" Hanging

'I
I

.Vo-..· optn

160 Mulben ~ A,·e.
l'umeruy

Pass
Pass

·general, wt1en each panner has a long
suit opposite shortage, perhaps two 6- 1
fits , the weaker hand's long suit should
become l"rumps. In !hat way. his hand
will general~ three or four trump tncks.lf
the stronger hand's suit is trumps, the
weaker hand might become waste

BARNEY

H UBBARD 'S
GREENHOUSE

Communit~· Center

nanny
42 Not spicy
44 Hula-dance
fete

cannot one learn from experience? 0 1
course. 11 only we could go back... reliving
with what we know now! '
This deal relates· to '"twO" and 'long .~ In

985-4384

Flowers &amp; Veg'itabie
plams Flat $6.95

1 Baby ch ick
sound
5 DcQma
8 WhTstle
sound
12 Home,
to Jose
13 Give - br.,ak
14 Yours and

41 Tarzan's

Italian aUthor and poet Cesare Pavese
wrote. "Livtng tS like work1ng, out a long
additiOn sum. and it you make a mistake
in the lirst two ·totals you will never find
the right answer.'
I'm 1101 sure that I agree with that. Why

starting at 27 hor se · 57 horse
with ·shuttle transmission
~- "·d. remote hydra ulics 3 year \\'a rrant y
·
**** Also available***"'

Formerly at 108
\\'. Main Pomeroy
IS NOW OPEN AT
The Mulb e rr~·

Pass

Two long suits,
only one declarer

New Dealer for Montana Tractors

The Parish Shop

2'"'.

Opening lead : • K

Bucket Truck

£EWIS

and

Pass
Pas s

East
Pass

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

30 YrS. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

.~=====~~

Help Wanted

NEA Crossword Puzzle

·'

J tO 4

West · North
Pas s

I t

~

949-1405

Get Your Uessage Across
Wllh ADa,ily Sentinel

4

y

DeHler: South
South

992· 6215 ·:rv 0 M&gt;i2s
Pomeroy, Ohio
25 Yea rs l ocal Ex rience

110WARD L
WRITESEL 5 SONS

.

·-

•

+ AQ .I !087 .i
• A6 j
.

V.C, YOUNG Ill

MANlEY'S
SElf STORAGE

on . the. ·following
described real estate,
of
which
said
Defendants, John E.
Millar and Lori A.

5

•

·storage

12 Noon
Sunday 15th

ij

A AQR75
¥ A 9 i 6
f 6 2

sOut h

We do It all except
fumace work

r.Ji!f.

Only

K 9 ~ 3

Q 10

740-667-0700 1-888-HUPP234

• Rooting 1J Gutte r, .
• VInyl Sid ing &amp; Painting
• Pallo and Porch Decks

l7401 985-4180

opportun ity t o be
placed on th e
general ele ction
ballot in November
2005 . This gives
me the opportunity
to becom e your
Middleport counci l
representative.
With your help and
support
in
November, I will ·be
able t o util ize my
years of knowledge
and experience to
help make t he right
p o l icies
and
dec ision s lor you,
facing Mi ddlep ort
inthe future.
Thank you for your
past, present, and
future support

+

•

Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Rollover5 • Major Med •
,Medicare Sup. • Cancer • Accident

• New Garages
~ Electrical &amp; Plumbing

liNDA'S PIINnNG

YOU

t:ast

\Vf'St
• 9 2
• K ~ 3

Tuppers Plains, OH

• Room Additions &amp;
Remod eling

Tate the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

THANK

II 5 2

-

4180bSR#7

CARPENTER
SERVICE

.

~-

•

and Financial Services

YOUNG'S

Separ8te and inde- Miller 8re the owners
SCHOOl ASSOCIA·
CONCRETE
pendent bids wli I be of :
TION,
CONSTRUCTION
received with respect
Commonly known as
Its Unknown He irs
to . t he chassis and
33058 St. At. 33 #215, and Assigns
Concrete Removal
body type and will
Pomeroy, OH 45769, And •
WESTERN
Replacement
.recipient of Area 14
Jane 8Bnks at the
state that the buses and further d~scribed
METHODIST
Workforce
Policy Meigs County Job &amp; when assembled and in a mortgage filed ' CHURCH
AU Types Of
• ..\l'i.'l' ptin g ~l'W
Board , Is seeking pro- Family Services, ,.175 pfior-to deliverY, com- July 21 . 1988 In
Its Unknown Heirs
!\ k mlwrs
Concrete Work
posals to provide ·a Race
Street , ply with all school Volume 171 , Page . Bnd Assigns
, • H l'a n · "n u l \"
comprehensive year
Middleport,
OH
district
specifica - 641 ; Meigs County
Addresse s Unknow,n
CtJm nit'n·iai .
· 25 Years Expcric 11c~
·tions, all safety regu- Recorder's Office .
round youth program
45760.
Equ i Pment
Case No.
David Lewis
• W ork out on \our own
to eligible youth ages
Proposals must be lations and current And that Defendants, 05·DR·
hou rs 2~n
14-21 consistent with
submitted to Theresa
Ohio
. Minimum Winifred J. King aka · UEGAL NOTICE
740-992-6971
Standards for School , Winifred Jane King, D e fendant s Serium. l nqui ri\.'li Onb
Meig1
County 's Lavender1
Meigs
lnsurrd
7 "'0 -!11:12-( IIJ!'!'
W o r k f o r c e . Cou'n ty Job &amp; Family
Bus Construction of ~md if deceased , all
Progressive School
Fn:e Eslimul es
Ask fur .lt&gt;O'
Development Plan, Services, 175 Race
the Department of heirs, d•visees, lega- Association, Western
provisions of the led· · Street, P.O. Bo• 191 , ·Education Bdopted by tees,
executors,
Methodist
Church
U t IH help you
eral
Workforce Middleport, OH 45760
and with the consent executrixes, adminis- and Wesleyan M. E. ·
clwose a la sti"g
!~vestment Act (WIA),
no later than May 27,
of the Director of trators, adminlstra- MethOdist Church ,
tribute w your lol'l'd
and related federal
2005 at 4:00 p.m. All
Highway .
Safety trixes and assignees whose last known
and state regulations,
submissions must be · Specifications
Ofl l' \ IIU.' ItiOI"J.
and and , David
Allen
Let me :Jo ;t !or youl
address was 104 Kerr
In establishing youth
received by mall or
Instructions to bid- Reed , aka David A. Street, Pomeroy, OH
\l'KEE
and
· II 45769 , are hereby
ac~lvitlas under WIA,
hand delivery. by the
ders are an file in the Reed,
\10\l ~IE\T
of
the deceased, all heirs , notified that on the
service providers are above date and time. office
( '(),\ II'.\ " '
expacted to link pro- . No materials received
Treasurer, · Racine,
devisees, legatees , 1st day of April , 2005 ,
39 7 ~8 SR 1-n
grams with local
after lh'e date will be
Ohio.
executors, ' executrix- that
Forest
Run
Pumcw,·. O H
· labor needs, provide
included In previous
of es, administrators, B&amp;iptist
The · Board
Church ,
1411-9'1i -'192 Z
a strol1g . connection
submissions nor be
Education reserves administratrixes and
Plaintiffs , filed their
Affe1 6pm '"&lt;. ~
~
l
un -S;1t 10Ati-1-5P,\ I
between
academic
considered .
The
the right to reject any assignees
be . complaint to quiet
tBefOfe 6pm
~ ~- l
and
occupational department reserves · and all or parts of any required to set up any
\\l \\dlllllh. IIlLI
title to the real estate
leave MoUOO!) ; ,A~··, *':
,......,_...;t...l..J:i::..::Jt&amp;
h&lt;&gt;tll .\: Ill ht&gt;l l ll'
· .learning, and estab· the right to reject any
and all bid.s.
interest they may
described in the comlish programs which · or all proposals. In
By Olrder of the Board hav.e in said premises
plaint and other relief I •IJ'i'''lllilllllll\ .11 thL
prepare youth for . accordance with 29
of
Education
of or be forever barred, in the Court of ...l.illlilil '~ 'I ill\ t'\111'11. I'
post secondary edu· CFRpart 31, 32 Meigs Southern
. Local that upon · failure of
Common Pleas ·Of
cation or Unsubsi- County Department
School District.
said Defendants to
Meigs County, . Ohio,
High and Dry
dlzed emplbyment as of Job &amp; Family
Pamela L. Carter
pay or to cause to be . bearing Case No. OSappropriate. Services Services is prohibited
Treasurer
paid said judgement
DR.
should Include: deter- from discrimination
Southern
Local within three days
This notice will run
mining eligibility lor on the basis of race, School District
once each week for
from its rendition that
Phone
· WIA programs, pro· color, national origin, 920 Elm Street
an Order of Sale be
successive
six
vldlng a comprehensex , age, religion ,
Racine, Oh 45771
Issued to t~e Sheriff weeks, the last publi·
(740) 992-5232
slve array of services
po_
l itlcal belief or dis·
(5) 1, 6, 13
of Meigs County, cation being on the
5x 10, 1Ox I0.
to eligible .youth and
ability.
.
Ohia, to appraise , . 13th day of May, 2005. . •"""= "':::;:"= ="'I
Incorporating the ten
(5) 6, 13, 20 .
advertise In the Dally the Defendants will
IOxiS, i0x20.
program
elements
Sentinel and sell said
haVe
twenty-eight
Public Notice
10x30
under WIA. Two proreal estate, that the
days from the day ol
grams will be awardPublic Notice
All Your .Home
Notice of Publication
premises be sold free
last publication in
Janet Jeffers
l m p ro v ~ m~nt :\o:ed:-.
ed and program costs
Stephen D. Miles , and clear of all
which to answer said
33795
Hil and Road
• Sidin~ • Wi mlm\ ~
must not exceed PUBLIC NOTICE
Atlorney at law .
claims, liens and complaint.
•
Dec
k
~
•
Porche-.
$100,000.00
each
. Pomeroy, Ohio
Separate, sealed pro18 W. Monument lhterest of any of the
Denise L. Bunce
• Ct:ramic Tile &amp;
(subject to available posals
will
be
Avenue
parties herein, that (0042121)
Hardwood Fiourin,g
lunda) and shall be received at the Office
Dayton, Ohio 45402
the proceeds from the Attorney for Plaintiffs
• Gura l!e\
l
lor thil period of July of the Treasurer of the
Winifred J. King, aka sale of said premises
105 N. Second Street
• Room Add.-; Rooting · p.;.;.:.A~LJ.I~'.I.i~~
1, 2005 through June Board of Education of Winifred Jane King , . be applied to the Pomeroy, OH 45769
• Kitc hJ:n ~ • B~th~
30,
2006. Southern
Local
and II deceased, all Plaintiff 's judgement (740) 992·5730
""No Jo!J ·~;, Smo/1 ··
Administrative cost
School District . of heirs, devisees, lega- and for such other (4) 8, 15, 22. 29 (5) 6,
Ra~· in.:: . OH
may not exceed 10% Racine, OH in M@.ig~
teQ:s ,
§!~g t; utors ,
relief IQ which USDA
13
7 ~0·247-2 1 62 or
of the total contract County,
until
12
executrixes, adminis- Rural Development is
7 ~0 -~ 16 · 3508
97 Beech Street
award . In addition , o'clock noon , May 20,
I~ y r~ . Experience ..
trators , admlnlstra· entitled.
• pd 1 mo
Middleport, OH
30% of the total con~
2005. At that time, trixes and assignees Said defendants are
tract award must be
opened
by
the
and, David
Allen directed to the comPublic Nolice
10xl0x10x20
used to serve out-ofTreasurer ' Of said
Reed, aka David A. plaint wherein notice
school
youth. board as Provided by
if under the lair debt The
Reed,
and
Village
of
992-3194
Proposals
must law lor a 71 passan·
deceased, all heirs , collection · practice
Pomeroy wishes to
demonstrate
the
or 992-6635
ger
school
bus,
dev.lsees, legatees, , act is given. Said sell the following real
capability to meet according to specifiexecutors, executrix- defendants will take
ROOFJ NG
estate, located near
"Middleport's only
performance ·stan- cations of said board
es, administrators , notice that it be the intersection of E.
All t) (Xi:-. or' Wl'fing:
Self·Storllge"
. dards and to quantify
of
education. admlnlstratrix"es and required to. answer Main Street and Kerr
Shi ngle. Flat. 1\lcraiassignees
whose said Complaint on or St..,!, In the VIllage
. Nc\\ ur Repair
addresSe.s
are belo'1' the 1st day of of Pomeroy : l&lt;&gt;t i061 ,
Card of Thanks
Announcements
unknown, will hereby July, 2005 orjudge- 07~ , 076 , 077,078, 079
Seam!(!sS Gutter take notice that on
ment will be rendered and 080 (all lots
Dowm.pout - Siding
December 20 , 2004 , . accordingly.
together
contoin
Rural USDA
•FnllSIImlliS*
Rural
approximately
·114
GUN SHOOT USDA
Development, filed Its Development
acre). Sealed bids
FORKED RUN Complaint
· In Plaintiff
shall be accepted
· New Homes.
Foreclosure
and Stephen D Miles
SPORTSMAN Marshalling of Lien&amp; Attorney
•. Ga•ages
Friday,
June p.m
3, 2005.
until 2:00
. on
I would like to
In the Common Pleas (4) 29, (5) 6, 13, 20, 27, All bids should be
CLUB
'
·
·Complete
thank all the loyal
Court
of
Meigs (6) 3
sealed and clearly
STANLEY TREE
Remodeling
All proceeds
County, Ohio, being
voters who took
marked Real Es1ata
TRIMMING &amp;
Bid on the outside of
GENERAL
will be devided Case No. 04-CV· I 69
the time and made
'
against John E. Miller
the envelope and
Public Notice
the effort to vote
between
and Lori A. Miller
submitted to
tha .
CONTRACTING
Stop &amp; Compare ·
for me in the May
p(aylng
lor
judge·
THE
COMMON
E.
•
Prompt
&amp; quality Village
Clerk,
320
Squad90 ,of
ment in"the amount of PLEAS COURT OF Main Street, Pomeroy,
work
3rd
pr i mary
Reedsville
&amp;
$76,181.10 with ·Inter· MEIGS
COUNTY, Ohio 45769·
•
Afford
able Rates
ele ct i on
as a
est thereon according OHIO
13 20 27
Squad
86
of
(S)
'
•
R
efe~ences
'
~andidate
for
. to the terms of the FOREST RUN BAP·
note from August 30, TIST CHURCH,
Tuppers
Plains
Avai lable
Middleport
2004 until Paid and Plaintiffs
• &gt;ree Estimates
Councilman.
Rim Fire Riffle
for foreclosure of vs·
Ca ll Gary Stanley
Thank you for the
said Mortgage Deed PROGRESSIVE

program outcomes. A
copy of the Request
for Proposal, may be
picked
up
from
Theresa Lavender or

05 13 05

.. KJ\06 ~ ::1

Vulnerable: Eas t-West

3 miles west of'
Pomero .v, OH .
on Sta te R t. .124
Ynur R ig hi In K nu w. ll c lhTrcd H ig ht to Y n.u r· llnnr.

.

i\"ortb

Rocky Hupp lnsura

Nl..'\\ H omr~ • Virw l

• Pidw p &amp; J)clin· r~· Antil a hh:
• War ranh· Sc n ·ice Uenlcr
l'~tr Hcdnla x Etruipm t.• nt
·• III.OIHJ &amp; 12.000 Wall Hri~w·• &amp;;. Si mtt o n
..,
~t nndh~ · C l•nc ra lll r S~· stt• rn ...
H•..,,.. ; !!. ~ \l . f . I\. I ~~• ·· l "k"""l '~"do~ . I •u·nd«l "'" '" it~ ~··• I

REQUEST FOR PRO·
POSAL
The Meigs County
Department of Job &amp;
- Family Services, sub-

~----

The Dail y Senti nel • Page 87

www.mydailysentinel.com-

'

ACROSS

'
.Sales &amp; Warranty Service De•al&lt;!r
• La wn &amp; Trac~ ur Sl·r , ·it•c

'

'

Phillip
Alder

A'f.V'S • GO KARTS • CYCLES

992-2155
.

.Friday, May 13, 2005- ALLEY OOP

BRIDGE

·ON THIS PAGE FOR
AS LOW AS

$26.00

' I

Now A•·ailable At

been p uHin g off doing in lie u o f doing
nscessary task s. It'll give yoU th at lift
in spirit ontt gets from acco m plishing
h is o r h e r heart's desire. ·
GE M INI (May ·21·Juna 201- Today is
an exce lle n t day to get together with
your fri end s o r family with w h o m you
li"ke t o socialize . W h ateve r you plan
wi ll turn o ut to be fur
C ANCER (Ju n e 2 1-Jul y 22) Overall conditions took p articularly
fortunate l or you today, b ut your
g reatest lu ck is likely to occ ur in s ituatio n s where you are able to do things
for tho"s e who are closest to yOur
hean
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)- Y~u r warm th
o f c h aracte r and good sense o f
hu mor w ilt bring s u nshine into th a
!ive;; of your comp anions today a nd
have a powe rful infl uence in m a k ing
those who are down feel o p timistic.
V IR GO ( Aug. 23·Sept. 22)- Persons
· who h ave your bast interests at heart
have been cognizant of yoUr need s
an d today th ey could step t o the tore
and do something abg ut mak ing s u re
you get what you requ ire and d asire .
LIBRA (Sept. 2 3-0ct . 23) - T oday is
a time w h e n eve n som e of your exa g·
gerated hopes and desires. can b9
realized. so get ou t and p u t your energ ies in to doing some thing you've
w anted to bring 1nto being .
SCORPIO (Oct . 24- N ov. 22) E s tablish worthwhi le projects and
devote the best that is inside you to
attaining them tci:daY· Maier achteVemen ts are possible at this point in
time , so make hay while the s u n
sh ines.
·
SAGITTARIUS (N ov. 23-0ec. 2 1) Focus your most diligent efforts on
projects today that you ftlel strongly
about getting accomplished . Hopes
can be fu ltilled now in ways beyond
yoyr expectations.
C APRICO R N (Dec . 22-..Jan . 19) Because joipt ventures look especial·
ly promising fOr you today, try to
arrange . a coatitron with those who
can contribute a great deal toward
achieving the largest possibilities tor

VE RRI

I I I, I
~..-0-L..-·_M.-O-,Br:-'-11 ;.'·.

I .I I ll .

Imagination: you ·think you're

hav :ng a great t:me when
you're oniy. spendin~ . ·- · ·.

.ETONNI
:. _,,. _:.,.,,,...,..,.-,..,-1IQ

~....,,
L-

L._L._L._L.-L.__J

Compfe!e the

ct&gt;u&lt;ll~

' ouoted

b)-' fdlrng in the mrni.ng w=»rd~

you deve lop !rom sJep No. 3 below. ·

@PRINT.NUMBE I EO lE HEIS tN
THES E SQUA RES
A tJNS(R A.MBlE ABOV E l Ei fERS
~
TO GET ANSWER

SCP.AM·lETS ANSWERS

c- ' o&lt;-

Asthma . Dryer " Mo wAr- Noilfy · THOR,-.;$

One of my Grandmothers fav':'~ t : := Sa r:!p ! e~s read _

·· Pr :&gt;b :am s Are 0jJportW1 ilit!S \ Vt: n . I ~ 10~; NS u~~ P1~rr.

ARLO &amp;JANIS

growth.
AQUAR IUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) -Your
natural leadership ab1lities can bring
divef"gent: interests together today for
a collectiYe belltlficial purpose. Under
your guidance •. all can be joif")ed
.
together into one dynamic force.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Try to
implement any changes you've been '
contemplating that you feel coukj
improve your working conditions.
Fa,vora~e
conditions exist today
where you can Qat what you want.
AR I ES (Marc h 21 -April 19) Whether you know it or not, yovr personal appeal with your peers wilt be
highly accentuated today. so don't be
surprised if you 're the center of atten·
11on wherever you" go.

lf '(0() 00!.YHAD ACUI,.
fi.IO~, flOW MX.!l.D'!OO
t.VE,IZ FIOO tr?

SOUP TO NUlZ

Scorpion Tractors
"Taking Th e Sting Out Of
Hard Work!"
Mid-Size 4Wheel Drive T racto r
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. t 24 Chester 985-3301
. I

•

'

�•

Page B8 • The 9aily Sentinel

Friday, May 13,

www .mydailysentinel.com

2005 Tri-Valley Conference , Manchin commi~ $1 million
Mingo County track
·Championship track results for
'
for the project," she said.
Glllt.S RESULTll
TEAM SCORE$ - 1. Federal Hoddng
127, 2. Belpre 108, 3. Waterlolt! 102, 4 .
AleKinder 93, 5. Nefsonvill&amp;lbrk 50.5, 6.
EMtem •9, 7. Metgs 47, 8. Miller 31 .5, 9.
VInton County 23, 10. Trlmb&amp;e 15, 11 .
w.laton 5
SHOT PUT- 1. W hitney Maiden (N-V)
38-10; 2. Tabitha VanDyke (B) ~4 1-2: 3.
Jordan · Bateman {N-V) 31-11 1-4; 4.

Belpre 5·03.70

Aiicia Colvin (8) 30-0 3-4; 5. -Lesley
Preece (Meigs) 29-5: 6. Erin Weber (E)

o. 2. Kevin Co" (B) 45-0 1-2; 3. Micha

27-3 1-4; 7. Ashley Hudnan (A) 27·2 1-2:
8. Amy Smith (A) 25·7 3-4
~
DISCUS THROW - 1. Whitney Malden
(N·Y) 124-11 (new meat record ): 2.
TBbltllaVoriDyke ,(B) 107-7; 3.,Hope K;ng
(Wa) 98-8; 4. Alicia Colvin -(8) 88-5: !5..
Kelsey Lackey (FH) 87·2~ 6, Melissa
Gruaser (Meigs) 81 -11; 7. Lesley Preece
(Meigs) 80-9; 8. Erin Weber (E) 79-1 .
HtQHJUMP- 1. AshleeReynolds(8)5-1 (new meet record!: 2. Amanda 'Stover
(FH) 5-3; 3. Megan Edwards (N· Y) 5·0; 4.
Raquel Hathaway (Wa) 5-0: 5. Jami Turrill
(A) 4-tO; 6 . Jenny Harms (VC) 4-6: 7.
Cuay Panerson (MGigS) 4-6; 8. (tie)
. Krisa Beachy (Minar) and Jordan
Bateman (N-V) 4-4
LONG JUMP- 1. Taylor Carr {B) 15--3; 2.
Aahloe Reynolds (B) 14·8 t-2; 3. Cheryl
Boutne (Miller) 13-8; 4. Amanda Stover
(FH) 13-1 : 5. Usa Meade (N-V) 13-0; 6.
Holly Dunfe&lt;i (FH) 12-n. 7, Katy Stabler
{We) 12-5 1-4; 8. Megan Edwards (N-Y)
12-41,2
POLE VAULT- 1. Ashlae Reynolds (B)
·9--e {new lll8Bt record); 2.-Taylor Cau (B)
9-D;3.Tracyllye(FH)8-0; 4. Aii0eddens
(FH} 8--0
.
·
4X800-METER RELAY - 1. Waterfolt!
(Deolra Tori*, Ashla\&lt; Fox, Hope King
and AahleiQI1 Tom&amp;a) 10:53: 2. Alexander
10:54.90: 3. Vinton County 11 :24.30; 4.
Eutern 11:44.20; 5. Belpre 11 :44.60; 6.
Federal Hocking 11 :51 .20; 7. Trimble
1.):58.20 .
1~METEA HURDLES- 1. Taylor Carr
(B) 15.50; 2. All Daddens (FH) 17 20: 3.

Trimble 16, 9. Miller 12, 10. Wellston 11 ,

tt . Watarfolt! 3
SHOT PUT -1 . Derek Carpenter (B) 49Clark (VC) 44- 1 1-4; 4. Darren
Scarbrough (E) 43-9: 5. Gary East (VC)
43-7 1·2: 6. Ross Holter (E) 43·7 1·2; 7.
Adam Tate (F.H) 40·7 1·2; 8. Matt Taylor
(FH) 40-5 .1-2
PISCUS THROW- 1. Rqss Holter (E)
157-8 (new · meet record); 2. Daniel
Cooper (B) 146·1 ; 3 ·Darren Scarbrough
(E) 134-3; 4. Matt Taylor (FH) 133-7; 5:
Oere~ Ca1penter (B) '· 128·6: 6. Phtl .
Hutchinson (A) 127·9; 7. Micha Clerk
{VC) 125-4; 8. AdamTale(FH) 113-1
HIGH JUMP - 1. Brandon Smith (B) 6-Q;
2. Cody Hornsby (FH) 5-10: 3. Brant Day
(FH) 5·10: 4. Oavid Jolley (N-V) 5-tO;.S.
(ti&amp;) SE\'th Allen (VC} and Brad Loyland
{B) 5-10; 7. Ryan Stewart (VC) 5-6; 8.
Andy Kinnan (M8igs) 5-4
LONG JUMP- 1. 1an Butcher (FH) 19· 1
3-4; 2. M~tt liitt (B) t 8-9; 3.' Bryce
Honaker lE) 17·111-4;4.Aob G9.briel (N·
V) 17-6; S. Matt Alloway (B) 17-5 1·2: 6.
Jell Sperry (VC) 17-2 H ; 7. Phil
Hutchinson (A) 17-1 1-2,; 8. Brant Day
(FH) 17-0 1-2 '
,
POLE VAULT - 1. Josh Harvey (B) 12-6;
2. Brent Willey (B) 12-Q; 3. 'Dana Vales
(FH) 12·0: 4 . Brody Remy (VC) 10-6; 5.
Traver Slusher (FH) 10·6: 6. Tommy Foul
(VC) 9-Q
4•800-METER RELAY 1. Vinton
County .(Jay Simmons, Troy Howdyshell.
Bruce Foul and Kore~ Thompson)
8:43.90; ~-Eastern 8:54.50; 3. Alexander
9:03.70; 4. Belpre 9:07 .70; 5. Federal
· Hoclc.ing 9:27.20; 6. Trimble 9:49.40; 7.
Wellston 9:49.80
110-METER HURDLES - t. Chris Neal

Chantal Kern (Wa) 17.60: 4. Feliza

(VC) 14:40 (new meet record): 2.

Goodfellow (FH) 17:90: 5. Casey Smith
(Mei11&amp;) 17.91 ; 6. Jolt!an Ba1eman(N·V)
1UO; 7. KaMe Hayman (E) 18.80
IC»METEADASH -1. Ama')da Stover
(FH) 13.13; 2. Allie Sayers (A) 13.19; 3.
Jenny Dolley (FH) 13.20; 4. Raquel
Hathaway (Wa) 13.50; ~- Charyl Bourne
(Miller) 13.70; 6. Wendy Sowell (A) 13.90;
7 : Usa Meade (N·Y) 14.00; 8. Amanda
GIU (Miller) 14.70
·~E1ER RELAY 1. Waterfolt!
{Chantal Kern, Amanda Schwendenna,
Cortney Barker, Raquel Hathaway)

Brandon Smith (B) 15.30; 3. C.J. Willianm
(FH) 16.00; 4. Brody Remy (VC) 17.30; 5~
Ed Beatty (E) 17.50; 6. Brandon Roe
(Wa) 18.60; 7. Matt Smith (T) 2t .70
tOO-METER DASH - 1. Man Winnett
(VC) 11 .10;2. Chris Neal (VC) 11.20:3.
Man Lilly (B) 11.30; 4. Rylan Kirkendoll
(A) 1 t.40; 5. Ma« Alklway (B) 11.5e; 6.
Rob Gabriel (N-Y) 11 .60; 7. Branden
Fisher (Meigs) 11 .70; 8. Sina James (A}
11 .90
4x200·METEA RELAY 1. VInton
County {Jeff Sperry, Brody Mace, Eric
Mullins and Matt Winne«) 1:33.40 {new
meet recot'd): 2. Federal Hccking 1:35.70;
3. Belpre 1:38.60; 4. Alexander 1:40.70;
5. Meigs 1 : 42 . ~; 6. Trimble 1:55
1 ,600·METER RUN 1. Josiah
Martindale (E) 4:49.30; 2. Michael Owen
(E) 4:50.50: . 3. Garratt Pugh (Wa)
4:·5 MO: 4. Jaz Ammon (A) 4:57.70: 5.
Dustin Householder -(Miller) 5:04.20; 6.
Troy HowdysheU (VC) 5:04.40; 7. Aaron
Cranford (N·Y) 5:08. 14; 8. Bryan Walker
(B) 5:10.30
4x100·METER RELAY - 1. Vinton
County (Jeff Sparry, Brody Maca, Eric
·Mullins and Matt WinneH) 45.30 ; 2.
Alexander 46.BQ.: 3. Federal Hocking
47.60; 4. Nelson-ville-York 47 .70; 5. Belpre
48.50; 6. ¥eigs 48.80; 7. Eastern 49.10;
8. Wellston 53.00
4C»METER DASH - 1. Matt Lilly (B)
51 .4q; 2. Jay Simmons (VC) 51.60: 3.
Cody Hornsby (FH)·52.60; 4. lan Butcher
(FH) 53 .40; 5. Joah Harvey (B) 53.60: 6.
Chria Hogsett (N-Y) 54.00; 7. Jeff Connell
(Miller) 56.40; 8. Aaron Cran1olt! (N-V)
57.40
300-ME1ER HURDLES ,- 1. Brandon
Smllh IB) 40.40; 2. Chris Neal (VC)
41 30; 3. C.J. Williams (FH) 44.20; 4.
Andy Kinnan (Meigs) 44.40; 5. Ed Beal1y
(E) 44.50; 6. Brad Layland (B) &gt;16.90; 7.
Chaz Driggs (FH) &gt;16.60; 8. Chris Hogsen

1:57.90: 2. Federal Hocking 1:58.90: 3.
Meigs 2:00.30; 4. Eastern 2:00.60; 5.
Vinton CoUnty 2:U.SO; 6. Alexander
2:15.90; 7. Belpre 2:16.60

RUN - · i. Ashlelgh
Torneatwa) 5:30.7c0 (new meet record);
2. Lora Spencer (Miller) 5:51.80: 3.
Hayley Metheny (A) 5:55.30: 4. Beth
~~ (E) 6:15.50; 5. Katie Grillo CVC)
6:18.70; 6. Astiley Savage (Meigs)
6:23.20; 7. Jacy Jackson (Miller) 6:29; 8.
Ashley Fox (Wa) 6:31.20
4x100.METEA RELAY - 1. Federal
Hocl&lt;lng (All Oaddens, Jenny Dailey,
Dannlella Vanderwall, Chelsea Bail)
5&lt;'.70;, 2. Nalsonvllle·York 56.60; 3.
Waterford 56.70': 4. Miller 57.40; 5.
Eutem 57.41 ; 6. Meigs 58.50; 7. Vinton
County 1:01 .60; 8. Alll(ander 1:03.40
400-METER o.t.SH - t . Allie Sayers (A)
1:05.10; 2. Cortnoy Barker (Wa) 1:06. 10;
3. Meghan Clelland (Meigs) 1:07.40; 4.
Wenrty Sowell (A) 1:07.50; 5. Jaose
Brethauer (B) 1:09.30; 6. Chelsea Bell
(FH) 1:10.90; 7. Jllllan Brannan (E)
1:11 .10;8.DaslraTornes(Wa) 1:12.20
300-ME1ER HURDLES- 1. Taylor Corr
(B) 47.00: Ashley Samar (M) 51.50; 3.
OannleHa Vanderwall (FH) 51.90; 4.
McKanzlo GutMo (T] 52.30; 5. Feliza
Qood1ollow (FH) 52.80; 6. Katie Hayman
(E) 55.80; 7. Chantal Kern (Wa) 5e.!!Q
800-METER RUN - 1. Aahlelgh Tornes
(Wa) 2:30.30 (new meal raoolt!); 2. Jaml (N-V) 50-80
llmll (A) 2:31.30; 3. Jen Hayman (E) 800·METER RUN- 1. KoreyTilompson
2:37.30; 4. Nlk1cl Brool&lt;a (T] 2:40.80; 5. (VC) 2:09.30; 2. Bruce Foul (VC) 2:12.00;
Hope King (Wa) 2:42.90; 6. Oaanna 3. Cody Hornsby (FH) 2:12,80; 4, John
0011on (FH) 2:44.30; 7. Kalil McCorkle Bowen (Bf 2:13.60; 5. Bryan Walker (B)
(VC) 2:44.31; 8. Aahloy Johnoon (FH) 2:13.90; 6. Trover Slusher (FH) 2:14.70; 7.
Owen Wast (T) 2:15.00; 6. Jordan lloOO
2:50.30
200-ME1ER DASH - 1. Amanda Stover (A) 2:18.40
(FH) 27.40; 2. Allie Sayem (A) 27.70; 3. 200-ME1ER DASH - · 1. Man Winnon
Jenny Oally (FH) 28.20; 4. Cheryl Bourne . (VC) 23.00; 2. Man Lilly (B) 23.30; 3. Joeh
(Millon 28.50; 5. Gortney Barker (Wa) Harvey (B) 23.60; 4. Er&lt;: Mullins (VC)
28.50; 6. Ashloa Reynolds (B) 28.50; 7. 23.8Q; 5. Jeff Miller (A) 24.40; 6. Branden
WOndy Sewell (A) · 29.00: 8. Meghan Fisher (Meigs) 24.50; 7. Rylan Kirkendall
Clelland (Malgs) 29.40
(A) 24 60
t. Ashlalgh 3,200-ME1ER RUN - t Michael Owen
3,200-METER RUN (Wa) 12:08.70 (new meat reooro): (E) 10:45.80; 2. Chris Davis (E) 11 :05.50;
2. Heylay Metheny (A) 13:20.80; 3. 3. Dustin -••holder (Miller) .11 :13.80:
Joaptr Friend (A) 13:37 20; 4. Bath HysoH 4. Juslln Hartley (T) 1 1:19.50: 5. Phillip
(E) 13:55.80; 5. Christi Wright (FH) Lallathin (B) 11:25.40; 6. Troy Howdyshell
H:32.30; 8. Kaly Stabler (We) 15:00.20: (VC) 11 :38.20; 7. Nata West (A) 11 :38.50:
7. Ryon Davis (E) 15:15.80; 8. Holly 8. Brandon Crislip (B) 11 '50.00
0untoo (FH) 16:05.50
4x400-METER RELAY 1. Vinton
0400-METER RELAY .- 1. AIO&gt;tandar County (Chris Neal, Korey Thompson,
(Jimllllnill, Wendy sewell, Kasie Ruth,
Eric Mullins and Jay Simmons) 3:35.40;
Alia Ssyera) 4:30.60: 2. federal Hocking 2. Federal Hocl&lt;ing 3:36.90: 3. Belpre
4:35.40; 3. Easlem 4:35.70: 4. Meigs 3:43.80; 4. Eastern 3:56.80: 5. Al.,..nder
4:43; 5. Watorlolt! 4:51.70; 6. Tnmbia 3:56.90:. 6. Molgs ( :04.50; 7. Wellston
•:suo; 7. vtmon County 4:5e. 10: 8. 4:09.90: 8. T1lmbie 4:32.80,
1,600·METER

•

BOYS RESULTS
TEAM SCORES - 1. Belpre 168.50, 2.
Vinton Counry 156.50, 3. Fede ra l
Hoek)ng104 , 4 Eastern89, 5. Aiexander
48, 6. Netsonvltte-York 25, 7. Meigs 21, B.

a.

ror,.

Season
'

from Page 81
· Senior centerfielder. Scott
Peterman was 0-for-2 but did
drive in Rio's third run.of the
game with a sacrifice fly.
The Redmen then faced
Mount Vernon Nazarene (2714) in the loser's bracket
round and once again failed
to hold on to a lead. MVNU
had lost l 0-4 to Walsh iri the
other first round game:
MVNU took a 2-l lead in
the. fifth inning and Rio
quickly tied it at 2-2 in the
sixth.
The difference in the game
came in the seventh inning
when the . Cougars scored
three unearned runs, thanks
in part to a pair of key errors
by the Redmen. Joel Torres
made Rio pay for it's fielding
miscues by a launching a
three-run home run.
·Chau was the top offensive
· performer for the , Redmen in
game two, going 2-for-3 with'
a double and an RBL Branon
also added two hits with a

double and an RBI.
Junior righthander Dustin
Gibbs took the loss despite
pitc~ing we.ll. Gibbs (6-5)
gave up SIX runs (three
earned) in 7 l/3 innings .on
the hill.
Mike Laughlin (6-2) went
eight innings to gel the wio
for Mount Vernon Nazarene.
Laughlin scattered .seven hits
and yielded three runs while
striking out seven batters.
Rio closes out the season
· having . lost its' final three
.games . .
NOTES: Golom. Warren.
Peterman and freshman closer Keota Sato were selected
. I st Team All-American
Mideast Conference South
. Morales was
Division.
selected second Team and
Branon along with junior
&gt;hortswp
Matt • Martin
(Cleveland: OH) and senior
outfielder Charlie Kabealo
were (abbed honorable mention.
Golom,
Warren
and
Peterman also mad~ I st Team
Ali-NAIA Region IX at second base, designated hitter.
and outfield respectively.
'

WILLIAMSON . . W.Va.
(AP) - Gov. Joe Manchin
has agreed w supply $1 million toward the construction
of a dirt race (rack on a
reclaimed Mingo County
surface mine .
The commitmen( will
allow co.unty officials (o
seek a $1.2 million grant
from the U.S . .Economic
Dev elo j:lment
Adminimalion. The fedcntl
gran( will be used to provide
wa(er and sewer l&lt;i the proposed
Twin
Branch
Motorspbns
Cumplex.
Manchin spokeswoman Lara
Ramsburg .said Thursday.
Manchin supplied the
state ·s lener of wmmitmenl
for
the
money
on
Wednesday,
"Our commitmem is cotitingenl on the grant coming

Fends
from PageBl
" I think they were a little
reluctant to pilch (O Je~hua
(Branch)," sa1d Cullen. They
tried to pitch around him and
he was very patient at the
plate and that enabled u~ to
put a little pressure on their
defense."
Buffalo got a couple of
ex(ra base knocks from
Meadows with a triple and · a
home run · with Cha'pman
adding a double and a single.
Whittinglon; Garrjson, Scott
and Gilchrist also rapped a
single apiece for the host
(eam.
Meadows' home run leading off the first inning gave
the Bisons a .quick 1-0 edge
before the White Falcons .
came back with a two run
second thanks to a· couple of
fielding mistakes by the

The track will' be located
n·ear the Logan County line
otf U.S. 119 on a former
Massey Energy surface
mine . Coumy officials hope,
w us'e a combination of state,
federal and p1•i vate money to
build (he track. The final
cost is expected to be in
excess of $4 million.
Massey Energy Chainnan
and CEO Don Blankenship
has commiued to raise or
provide $1 million, !he company has said. ·
Blankenship "s 23-year-old
son John is· a driver in the
World of Outlaws Late
Model Series. Last year the
younger Blankenship finished 13th in.the point standings and second in the
··Rookie of the Year" standmgs.

ALo-NG-tHE RIVER

2005

··
. On The Right Track: .
Local School students learn alternatives
to drug use, Cl

Putnam County team.
Wahama added two more
tallies in the fourth to
increase its lead to 4-1 as
Vickers delivered the big hit
in the inning for WHS.
Buffalo closed to within a
pair with a single run in the
fifth before !he Mason
County squad seemingly
blew il open after tacking on
three runs in (he sixth for a 72 advantage. The Bisons
failed to go down quietly ·
however by scoring three
runs of its own during its half ·
of the sixth · to pull' back . to ·
within two at 7-5,
In the seventh Buffalo
scored once to l]lake it a onerun contes( and had runners
a! second and third before
Zerkle fanned the final batter
to end the game with WHS
clinging to a 7-6 decision.

•
I

Ohiu \all&lt;'~ l'uhlishing Co.

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED.@MYOAILVSENTINEL.COM

• Raiders third at OVC
meet. See Page 81

~

Wahama 7, Buffalo 6 .
Wahama 020 203 D -785
Buffalo
1'00 013 1 - 687
Sayre, Zerkle (7) and Stafford . Garrison·
and Whittington. WP - Sayre. ~p - .
Garrison . Save- Zerkle.

• Rear Uftgate

'i'.,_,

POMEROY - After rain.
floods and a bank slip
delayed progress on construction of the
new
Pomeroy/Mason
Bridge.
progress is now being made,'
but the completion date of the
bridge has been .moved ahead
several months.
Stephanie · Filson of the
Ohio
Department
of
Transportation District l 0
said the project was "months
behind" . earlier in the year
because of the delays.
"'For a lime, progress on the
project was months behind,
but they've been working w
catch up, and now we're
gaining some ground," Filson
said.
The slip on the Ohio River
bank on .the Pomeroy side of
the project was a major reason for the delay, according
to Project Manager Don Tillis

CUSTOM VAN

.... Suspect indjcted in
. slaying Of Chillicothe
police officer.
:See PageA2
• Modern Woodmen to
.dine Tuesday.
.See PageA3
• SWCD summer camp
slated. See Page A3
• Holzer Senior Care
Center notes 1Oth
anniversary. See Page A5

READY FOR.

DEALER IN

DELIVERr!

WEST VIRGINIA/
WEATIIER

•

$ft. I

•

.......,..

~"

CIIIAD' ol IOGR

2.2 LitO!r OOHC EngiM, ltleniotl!
Keyless Entry. AMIFM Stereo With CD

..

CDU»aAIO EXI'. CAl 04
VOttec U liter Engint, Air
CoM!tlonlng, 61)'40 ~lit B~th S.Ut

.oetallt on Page A6

1.115
. 5 Spe..d Automatk, .3.4 lJtWf V-6.
AIINFM Stereo Wit.. CD

INDEX 4 SEcnONS- 24 PAGFS

•

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3800 V·6 Engine, a Way f'oMf seat,
Remote I(~ Entry

Around Town
Celebrations
Classifieds
Comics
. Editorials
Obituaries
Regional
Sports
Weather

11-·M-CNIW
SUEIMD 1111'. CAI '4M
4 $!)Hd AUitOI'IIItiC, VoMtc V-8
Power. Smood• Ridt Suspension

POMEROY - "Our reason to relay is w convey a
message of hope," said one of
the 50 cancer survivors
wall\ing the midway track at
the
Rock
Sprin,gs ,
Fairgrounds Friday night in
the opening lap of the 2005
Relay for Life.
The event not only raised
more than $35,000 for cancer
research, education, advocacy and service, but it gave !he
community a way to recognize those who are cancer
survivors and to remember
those who lost the battle.
Hundreds , of . residents
turned out for the annual
event where not only the sur. vivors but the caretakers were
given special recognition.
In an impressive ceremony
at dusk the more than 450
personalized
lumit!aries
Charlene HoeHch/ photo
Rfty cancer survivors kicked off the 2005 Relay for Life Friday night at the Rock Springs which lined the track were
Fairgrounds as they walked the path of hope marked by more than 450 luminaries given in lighted as the 19.teams which
honor or memory of cancer victims.
·
·
Pleii.Se see Relay, Al

BY BETH SERGENT
,
BSERGENT@MYOAILVSENTINEL.COM

IIMI.M3IMISCNIW

A3

C4-s
D Section
insert

A4
As
A2
B Section
A6

© 2005 Oltto Volley Publishing Co.

Power 5Mt a Windows. Crulst a

Beth Sergentjphoto

You're as young as you feel Local man

990* .S17,990*
.

$1.50 • Vol. :J&lt;J, Nu . ,-

fee ( abnve (he '"tier.·· Tilli s
said .
ODOT has c:hanQcJ t he
projected cumpkliOIJ da(e of
(he project lo May II. 2007.
Origitl&lt;illy. (he hridge was (0
have been comple ted iri the
fall of 2006 . .
ODOT.
C. J.
Mahan
Con.&lt;truC(ion
·Co.
and
Na\ional Engineering, the
joint i:umractors on the bridge
projec(, have an ave rage of 55
workers at the bridge site
each day. Tillis said. ·
The projected completion
c;late of the new
· Pomeroy/ Mason Bridge has
been delayed to two years
·from now due to 'delays
caused by htgh water and a
slip on the Ohio side of the
project, but progress is now
being made quick ly, according to the Ohio Department
of Transportation.

BY

INSIDE

LARGEST SELECfiON
IN STOcK AND

of ODOT. Frequent periods
of high water have also been
responsib le for holding up
.progress, Tillis sa id .
"Any delay beconies critical to !he whole project ,··
Tillis said .
.
Tillis said extra shahs have
been included on the Ohio·
side in order ·w protect the
·new cable-stay bridge strucl'ure from any impact the slips
migh( create in the future.
Now, crews are WQrking on
piling. header beams and
decking, par! of a temporary
backs pan structure on • the .
·Ohio side.
Crews have also begun
work on the two towers in the
river, which will anchor the
suspension cables that are an
integral pan of the bridge's
distinctive design. Tillis said
there are 13 segments in each
tower, and two of the segments have been completed
on each.
·• Both lowers are now 63

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFiCH@MYDAILYSENTINEL :coM

Page A5
. • Mary Francis Ferrell
• Sheila N. Jones
• Betty Jane Meqdows
•. John 'Johnny' Russell

BRAJJD •EW
ZOOS CHEVY
·CUSIOMVMS

.

Hundreds attend Meigs 2005 Relay for Life

• Onstar Safllty System

THE

l'omt•roy • l\liddlcpm1 • Gltllipolis • May 15, 2005

Bridge crews making up·for lost time·

· SPORTS

BRAID lEW 2001 ·
POI'I1ACGI
• Keyless Entry
u r.G on Hl..,w.,r

en ne

•

Hometown New~ for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties ·.

$16,
• 8 P-n11•r SeeUng ,

m·.~~
l.~""'
~

un a

OBITUARIES

• P&lt;lwer Windows a
• Aluminum Wheels

House of the Week:
House offers luxl.)rious amenities, D 1

0

·

MIDDLEPORT - "You' re
what you make of yourself," ·
Overbrook Rehabilitation
Center resident Doris Wilt ,
said following her motorcy. cle ride counesy of the Meigs
County Bikers Association.
"If you decide · to sit then
;xou're just going to sit. I try
to keep going."
.
·
Wi It was one Qf many
Overbrook residents who
chose to get going with the
free motorcycle rides from
members of the Association
who were once again giving
back to the community.
The free rides began seyen
years ago after Association
Beth Sercent/photo
member Bob Ritte·rbeck Members from the Meigs County Bikers Association recently
brought the idea from Athens · provided free motorcycle rides for residehts at Overbrook
County where he participated Rehabilitation ·Center for the seventh year in a row. In all, 26
in a similar program for nurs- residents took advantage of an afternoon ride through the
ing home residents who lived streets of Middleport on a Harley Davidso'n, including Dora
at The Plains.
Hysell who is pictured hitching a ride with Association member Rudy Stewart.
Please see Younc. Al

awarded
Bronze Star

Galliaman .
retires from
42-year career
withODOT
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYOAILVTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS When
Larry Burnette joined the
Gallia
County
Ohio
Department of Transportation
(ODOTJ as a highway maintenance worker in 1963, he had ·
just
graduated
from
Southwestern High School
and made only $1.42 per hour.
Fast forward to the present
and you will find an accomplished county manager :-vho
has not only made a career for
himself at ODOT. but has
dedicated 42 ·years of his life :
to serving (he traveling public.
A lifelong Gallia County
residem, Burnette has served
in many ODOT , roles
throughout his career. After
working in maintenance,
Burnette joined the construe,
lion department, where he
worked on the survey crew.
Eighteen years later, he was

Please see ODor. Al

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYOAILVTR IBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS - Fir~t Lt.
Sean Lane, .· 24, of Gallia
County. was awarded the
Bronze Swr Medal last week
for his ·service in Operation
Iraqi Freedom _
The· medal was presented
by the commanding general
of Ill Co(jls Artillery, Brig.
Gen. "Richard Formica.
tane served as (he director ·
of intelligence for MultiNational Corps Iraq's Air
Support Operations Center in
Baghdad.
A. 1998 graduate of River
Valley High School , ·Lane
. went on to obtain his bachelor o_f science degree in dipfomacy ' and foreign affairs

Please see Award, Al

Stephanie Rlton/ODOT

After 42 years' service to the
Ohio
Department
of
Transportation District 10,
Athens County Manager (and .
Gallia County 'resident) Larry
Burnette has retired from the
department. During his career.
he has worked in various pos~
tions including highway maintenance and construction.

lilt, Onstar Safety System

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